"As an economist and a public intellectual, Gary Becker was a giant. He won a Nobel Prize for his groundbreaking work in human capital, the John Bates Clark Medal as the best American economist under 40, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his contributions to public life and welfare. He is regarded by many as the greatest microeconomist in the field's history. After a 44-year career at the University of Chicago, Becker left a slew of manuscripts, projects, and speeches that were half-formed or never published. These papers offer glimpses both of his famed process and of the personality-direct, critical, curious-that make him a beloved figure in economics and far beyond. An Economic Approach collects and annotates these extant unpublished works as a capstone to the Becker oeuvre-not because the works are perfect, but because they offer an illuminating and deeply instructive glimpse into the mind and process of an economist who was always on. Longtime collaborator Richard Posner once described Becker a marathon runner of economic thought-forever chasing a big finish line, never stopping at artificial milestones along the way. An Economic Approach carries the flame of a great mind that was never motivated by publications, but whose spirit of inquiry will be forever relevant"--
A revealing collection from the intellectual titan whose work shaped the modern world.
As an economist and public intellectual, Gary S. Becker was a giant. The recipient of a Nobel Prize, a John Bates Clark Medal, and a Presidential Medal of Freedom, Becker is widely regarded as the greatest microeconomist in history.
After forty years at the University of Chicago, Becker left a slew of unpublished writings that used an economic approach to human behavior, analyzing such topics as preference formation, rational indoctrination, income inequality, drugs and addiction, and the economics of family.
These papers unveil the process and personalitydirect, critical, curiousthat made him a beloved figure in his field and beyond. The Economic Approach examines these extant works as a capstone to the Becker oeuvrenot because the works are perfect, but because they offer an illuminating, instructive glimpse into the machinations of an economist who wasnt motivated by publications. Here, and throughout his works, an inquisitive spirit remains remarkable and forever resonant.
Recenzijos
The Economic Approach is a fascinating collection of Gary S. Becker's unpublished works with additional, insightful commentary on both his life and the works contained in this book. . . .The Economic Approach succeeds in giving readers at different educational levels in economics an understanding of how economics can be used as a method of inquiry into all kinds of human behavior. . . .While Becker's finished works and the published works of many other economists also cover these topics, this book's unique contribution is revealing Becker's thought process through his still-in-progress writings. . . .Highly recommended. * Choice * "We have been granted a lucky bonus after studying the finished books and papers that Becker published. . . .The Economic Approach gives us a glimpse of the way Becker's thoughts evolved when faced with a knotty problem: here we have sketches of the models that he so solidly built with the help of calculus. Statistical intuition is implicit. He was making them ready for empirical observation and testing." * Economic Affairs * "The Economic Approach is superb from start to finish. A wonderful tribute to a pathbreaking intellect." -- Douglas A. Irwin | Dartmouth College "Gary Becker is one of the greatest economists of all time. The Economic Approach is perhaps the best place to start dipping into his work." -- Tyler Cowen | George Mason University "What a tremendous book! Becker was a giant, with an extraordinary combination of intense focus and curiosity, and you can see his genius here. Be prepared to be surprised and illuminatedand to have some fun in the process. -- Cass R. Sunstein | author of "Too Much Information"
Foreword by Edward Glaeser
1. Just the Beginning
Acceptance Speech at Bradley Award Ceremony, June 4, 2008
The Spirit of the University of Chicago, September 14, 2010
2. Accounting for Tastes
Preference Formation within Families, June 1992
Rational Indoctrination and Persuasion, March 2001
Some Notes on Drugs, Addiction, Families, and Public Policy, May 2000
Promotion Tournaments, Power, Earnings, and Gambling, July 1991
3. Household Production and Human Capital
Should the Military Pay for Training of Skilled Personnel? August 15, 1957
Further Reflections on the Allocation of Time, February 2014
The Insurance of Market and Nonmarket Human Capital, November 1980
On Whether Intergenerational Mobility Has Declined in US While Inequality Has Increased, March 2012
Derivation of Relation Between Schooling of Parents and Children and Inequality, April 2012
4. Income Inequality and the Public Sector
A Positive Theory of the Redistribution of Income, April 1978
A Note on Optimal First Best Taxation and the Optimal Distribution of Utilities, 1982
5. Family Economics
Economics and the Family, September 21, 1999
Chronological Academic Life of Gary S. Becker
Selected Writings about Gary S. Becker
Bibliography of Gary S. Becker
Dissertations Chaired by Gary S. Becker at Columbia University and the University of Chicago
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
Julio J. Elias is professor of economics, director of the master of economics, and executive director of the Joint Initiative for Latin American Experimental Economics at the University of CEMA, Argentina. Casey B. Mulligan is professor in the Kenneth C. Griffin Department of Economics and program director at the Initiative on Enabling Choice and Competition in Healthcare at the University of Chicago. Kevin M. Murphy is George J. Stigler Distinguished Service Professor of Economics in the Department of Economics and the Booth School of Business at the University of Chicago.