Arthur Stanley Goldberger (November 20, 1930 – December 11, 2009) was an econometrician and an economist.
He worked with Nobel Prize winner Lawrence Klein on the development of the Klein–Goldberger macroeconomic model at the University of Michigan.
[1][2] He spent most of his career at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where he helped build the Department of Economics.
Among his many accomplishments, he published a number of articles critically evaluating the literature on the heritability of IQ and other behavioral traits.
[1] In 1968 he was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association.