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My vote is a definite no. But econosaur is right; Levitt would have had more math now. Anyway, he isn't one of the really big publishers. A lot of posts seem to cite faculty with a prominent public (as opposed to research) profile as key to a department. The people with the most pages in top 30 journals (according to the Kalaitzidakis et al. definition) in 1994-2003 were:
Phillips, Peter C B Yale U 1536
Heckman, James J U Chicago 1141
Acemoglu, Daron MIT 1099
Smith, Bruce D Texas 951
Tirole, Jean Toulouse 929
Neumark, David Michigan State U 862
Andrews, Donald W K Yale U 850
Pesaran, M Hashem U Cambridge 796
Gruber, Jonathan MIT 741
Samuelson, Larry Wisconsin 722
Laffont, Jean Jacques Toulouse 693
Rustichini, Aldo Boston U 652
Jackson, Matthew O Caltech 632
Besley, Timothy J LSE 630
Blundell, Richard W IFS 628
Rosenzweig, Mark R Harvard U 621
Keane, Michael P Yale U 610
Krueger, Alan B Princeton U 607
Bovenberg, A Lans Tilburg U 583
Svensson, Lars E O Princeton U 580
Wolpin, Kenneth I U Pennsylvania 579
Glaeser, Edward L Harvard U 573
Angrist, Joshua D MIT 551
Fudenberg, Drew Harvard U 545
Lee, Lung Fei Ohio State U 536
Canova, Fabio U Pompeu Fabra 531
Linton, Oliver B LSE 529
Turnovsky, Stephen J U Washington 522
Ray, Debraj NYU 513
Shleifer, Andrei Harvard U 512
Epstein, Larry G U Rochester 509
White, Halbert UCSD 508
Levine, David K UCLA 505
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