Maxwell Rosenthal
Assistant Professor
- School of Economics
Overview
Max Rosenthal joined the School of Economics at Georgia Tech as an Assistant Professor in August 2019. His research mostly lies in the area of microeconomic theory, with primary emphases on contract theory and mechanism design and a secondary concentration in behavioral economics. In particular, Max has recently studied the incorporation of consumer choice data into the design and pricing of complex products. Elsewhere, he has investigated risk taking in moral hazard problems by individuals with heterogeneous risk preferences, with applications to employment contracting and executive compensation. More broadly, Max’s work is concerned with the implications of uncertainty for the design of incentives and the allocation of goods.
Before coming to Georgia Tech, Max completed his doctoral studies in Economics at the University of Arizona.
- Ph.D., University of Arizona
- M.A., University of Colorado Denver
- B.A., University of Colorado
- Behavioral Economics
- Game Theory
- Market Design
- Microeconomic Theory
- ECON-4180: Game Theory Economics
- ECON-6106: Microeconomic Analysis
- ECON-7012: Microeconomic Theory I
Interests
Courses
- ECON-4180: Game Theory Economics
- ECON-6106: Microeconomic Analysis
- ECON-7012: Microeconomic Theory I
Publications
Journal Articles
- Energy price pass-through with long-term contracts
In: Economics Letters [Peer Reviewed]
Date: January 2026
We study the pass-through of wholesale natural gas prices into 12-month fixed-rate residential contracts in Georgia’s deregulated natural gas market. Our theoretical model suggests that socially optimal contracts should uniformly pass through future wholesale fuel costs during the contract period. We find that total pass-through is close to complete, but almost entirely driven by contemporaneous and lagged wholesale prices. Future price pass-through is limited and sometimes negative, deviating from the theoretical socially optimal benchmark.
Updated: Jul 29th, 2022 at 1:55 PM