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Julian Simon

Julian Lincoln Simon (February 12, 1932 – February 8, 1998) was an American economist.[1] He was a professor of economics and business administration at the University of Illinois from 1963 to 1983 before later moving to the University of Maryland, where he taught for the remainder of his academic career.[2]

Julian Simon
Born(1932-02-12)February 12, 1932
DiedFebruary 8, 1998(1998-02-08) (aged 65)
NationalityAmerican
EducationHarvard University (BA)
University of Chicago (MBA, PhD)
Known forSimon–Ehrlich wager
The Ultimate Resource (1981)
Academic career
InstitutionsUniversity of Illinois
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
University of Maryland
Cato Institute
Field
School or
tradition
Chicago School of Economics

Simon wrote many books and articles, mostly on economic subjects, from an optimistic viewpoint.[3] He is best known for his work on population, natural resources, and immigration.[4][5] Simon is sometimes associated with cornucopian views and as a critic of Malthusianism.[6] Rather than focus on the abundance of nature, Simon focused on lasting economic benefits from continuous population growth, even despite limited or finite physical resources, primarily by the power of human ingenuity to create substitutes, and from technological progress.[citation needed]

He is also known for the famous Simon–Ehrlich wager, a bet he made with ecologist Paul R. Ehrlich.[7][8] Ehrlich bet that the prices for five metals would increase over a decade, while Simon took the opposite stance. Simon won the bet, as the prices for the metals sharply declined during that decade.[9][10]

Early life and education edit

Simon was born in Newark, New Jersey, on February 12, 1932.[11] He grew up in a Jewish family who migrated to Newark as part of a wave of Jews who moved into the suburbs. His grandparents owned a hardware store in the city's downtown. In 1941, he moved with his parents to Millburn, New Jersey, where they experienced significant financial insecurity.[12] At the age of 12, Simon became estranged from his father, who he saw as distant "except when I did something that annoyed him."[13] He developed a closer relationship with his mother and two aunts. Reflecting on his childhood, he later recalled that he had "little joy" and fewer "celebrations and happy moments."[13]

Simon joined the Boy Scouts of America and became an Eagle Scout at age 14. His experience being hazed as a scout influenced a worldview which disliked elitism and sympathized with what he described as "the struggling poor, the powerless, and those denied opportunity by circumstance."[13] He was educated at the local Millburn High School.[14] In his autobiography, A Life Against the Grain, Simon wrote that "I first learned to say ‘Do you want to bet?’" when arguing with his father. "He would say outrageously wrong things in an authoritative fashion and refuse to hear any questions. There really was nothing I could say except ‘Do you want to bet?’"[15]

Simon studied experimental psychology as an undergraduate at Harvard University, where he also took graduate courses in the subject and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) in 1953. At Harvard, Simon was a member of its Reserve Officers' Training Corps program and attended on a full scholarship provided by the Holloway Plan.[16] He was active as a member of the university's debate team.[17] To help defray his expenses, Simon worked various jobs—including those as a salesman, clerk, and factory worker—and used his winnings from daily poker games. Among his close friends in college was sculptor Aristides Demetrios.[18]

From 1953 to 1956, Simon served as an officer in the U.S. Navy on USS Samuel B. Roberts. He was also stationed at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina for the U.S. Marine Corps. In 1957, he began graduate studies at the University of Chicago, where he received a Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) in 1959 and a Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in business economics in 1961.[19][16] He came under the influence of economists Milton Friedman, Friedrich Hayek, and Theodore Schultz, who were all based at the university.[20]

Career edit

From 1961 to 1963, Simon operated Julian Simon Associates, an agency for mail-orders and advertising.[21] He had moved to New York with his wife, Rita James, to start a business. However, he complained of his encounters with regulatory restrictions, which he called "tyranny of bureaucracy."[22] Simon resolved to write a book about direct mail and sought an academic position. During a time of rapid expansion among universities, he obtained a position as a professor of advertising at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.[23] His time owning a personal business would have an effect on his economic perspectives.[24]

Simon would spend most of his adult life in academia.[25] He published widely on topics concerning advertising and marketing, later broadly researching subjects from library storage to suicide to airline overbooking.[26] At the University of Illinois, he switched in 1966 to teach marketing there. His research focuses shifted towards addressing population growth. Simon used his previous experience in marketing towards promoting birth control; articles he published recommended campaigns for family planning. He drew the attention of W. Parker Mauldin of the Population Council, who arranged for him to visit India to research possible ways to advertise birth control. His initial assumptions held that an increasing population were accompanied by serious economic threats. After calculating the costs and benefits of family planning, he concluded that countries could gain financially by averting births and advocated stronger investments in planning programs.[27]

Essays by economists Simon Kuznets and Richard Easterlin in 1967 greatly influenced Simon, who began to be increasingly skeptical about the implications of population growth as he researched fertility rates. Kuznets and Easterlin argued that the historical data demonstrated that population growth had no negative effect on economic growth; Simon credited their findings as leading to his skeptic outlook. He also came to be influenced by Danish economist Ester Boserup, who found that, in contrast to Thomas Malthus, a growing population determined the most efficient agricultural practices.[28][29] During a 1969 visit to Washington, D.C., Simon experienced an epiphany at the Marine Corps War Memorial. He later wrote: "And then I thought, Have I gone crazy? What business do I have trying to help arrange it that fewer human beings will be born, each one of whom might be a Mozart or a Michelangelo or an Einstein—or simply a joy to his or her family and community and a person who will enjoy life?"[30]

In February 1970, Simon took the place of psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton to speak at a faculty forum in his home city of Urbana, Illinois. His talk was titled "Science Does Not Show There Is Over-Population." He declared, "I view the population explosion not as a disaster, but as a triumph for mankind. Whether population growth is too fast or too slow is a value judgment, not a scientific one."[31] The talk gained attention among his colleagues, and he was invited to speak at the 1970 Earth Day in Urbana. Simon spoke to a large audience; after Planned Parenthood president Alan Frank Guttmacher, he delivered his skeptical view questioning whether growth and scarcity posed a threat to society.[32] Biology professor and colleague Paul Silverman soon rose to the podium and denounced Simon's remarks, while Simon was beside him. Silverman called him a "false prophet" who "lacks scholarship or substance."[33] The event stayed with Simon, who now held a grudge against Silverman. Two weeks later, he soused Silverman at a faculty party and the two scuffled.[33] The Washington Post wrote in 1985 that the incident launched Simon's "intellectual war."[34]

In 1969, Simon was named as a professor of economics and business administration at the University of Illinois, and would remain in that position until 1983. From 1970–71 and 1974–75, he was a visiting professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.[16] In the early 1970s, Simon's academic work largely concerned the relationship between population and fertility. He wrote primarily in economic, demographic, and developmental journals.[35] By 1975, his published articles argued that there were economic gains from population growth, contrary to assumptions that growth lead to reduced investment. They came amid growing fears by environmental activists, who drew from biologist Paul R. Ehrlich's 1968 book, The Population Bomb, and the Club of Rome's 1972 report, The Limits to Growth.[36] By then, the view of scarcity among economists such as Simon, Robert Solow, and William Nordhaus differed from ecologists. Economists posited that scarcity was a changing, dynamic variable rather than the more commonly espoused view among scientists that it was a constraint which caused an ecological collapse.[37]

Simon took an aggressive approach in attacking what had been the dominant consensus on population growth. He issued rhetorical challenges that distinguished him from and went further than other economists. A stronger belief in the free market also set him apart from Nordhaus and Solow, who were part of the mainstream.[38] Political progressives and environmentalists saw his views as being overly-optimistic.[37] Even as environmental pessimists gained greater influence in policy decisions under President Jimmy Carter, Simon and other optimists intensified their criticisms of population control and environmental regulations.[39]

Simon moved in 1983 to join the faculty of the University of Maryland, College Park, as a professor in its Robert H. Smith School of Business, where he remained for the rest of his academic career.[21] He was a member of the American Economics Association, the American Statistics Association, and the Population Association of America.[40]

Wager with Ehrlich edit

 
Distinguished scientist Paul R. Ehrlich (pictured in 1974) predicted that multiple crises would occur in the 1970s, including a dramatic decrease in life expectancy and the need for food rationing.[41]

Simon and Paul R. Ehrlich first directly encountered each other in the summer of 1980, when Simon vehemently debunked claims by Newsweek and the United Nations, both of which had overestimated the death toll caused by a drought in West Africa from 1968 to 1973. His rebuttals, published in Science journal and The Washington Post, were also aimed at environmental doomers. Simon rejected Ehrlich's claim in The Population Bomb that limited food supply may necessarily require population control and also rejected that humanity was reaching its ecological limit, a claim popularized by The Limits of Growth.[42] He blamed the popularity for such exaggerated assertions as "bad news sells books, newspapers, and magazines."[43] Simon explained that technological advancements would alleviate scarcity because "we find new lodes, invent better production methods, and discover new substitutes."[44]

In December 1980, Ehrlich and his wife, Anne Ehrlich, along with colleagues John Holdren and John Harte, issued criticisms in Science of Simon's rebuttals. Arguing that technology was not sufficient to replace essential ecological systems, they asserted that a scarcity of energy and minerals remained a present danger. They dismissed Simon's writing as being a "tired old argument" with "striking misconceptions" which reflected economists "who know nothing about geology."[45] Biologist Wayne Davis at the University of Kentucky disputed a claim made by Simon's article that oil prices would decrease, saying it "defies logic."[43] Ehrlich and Simon's dispute would continue into the next year, with additional publications against each other in Social Science Quarterly.[46] Simon wrote in 1981, "How often does a prophet have to be wrong before we no longer believe that he or she is a true prophet?"[47]

Simon believed that Ehrlich's assumptions about demographics were erroneous and that his public statements had not experienced the "consequences of being wrong."[46] In 1969, Ehrlich said that "If I were a gambler, I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000."[46] He predicted that in the absence of global population control, widespread nuclear war, disease, scarcity, or dire resource scarcity would occur as a result of overpopulation.[46] Ehrlich garnered broad public attention for his views and disseminated his concerns in the Saturday Review, Playboy, Penthouse, and on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson, where he was a frequent guest and had at least 20 appearances.[48] In 1970, Ehrlich delivered 100 public lectures and appeared on 200 radio and television shows. His highly publicized engagements earned him celebrity status as a scientist.[49] Simon later recalled of Ehrlich: "Here was a guy reaching a vast audience, leading his juggernaut of environmentalist hysteria, and I felt utterly helpless."[50]

Wanting to "put my money where my mouth is," Simon challenged Ehrlich to a scientific wager to test their theories regarding future resource abundance, betting on the future prices of raw material.[51] If Ehrlich's belief that population growth would increase scarcity was correct, then the prices of the metals would increase due to heightened demand. Simon believed that technological advancements would reduce scarcity and so he predicted a decrease in prices over time.[41] Ehrlich agreed to the offer. He commented that he would accept Simon's "astonishing offer before other greedy people jump in."[52] He consulted Harte and Holdren to devise a basket of five metals that they thought would rise in price with increasing scarcity and depletion. They chose chromium, copper, nickel, tin, and tungsten.[52] Simon won the bet, with all five metals dropping in price.[53][54]

  • The price of tin went down because of an increased use of aluminium, a much more abundant, useful and inexpensive material.
  • Better mining technologies allowed for the discovery of vast nickel lodes, which ended the near monopoly that was enjoyed on the market.
  • Tungsten fell due to the rise of the use of ceramics in cookware.
  • The price of chromium fell due to better smelting techniques.
  • The price of copper began to fall due to the invention of fiber-optic cable (which is derived from sand), which serves a number of the functions once reserved only for copper wire.

In all of these cases, better technology allowed for either more efficient use of existing resources, or substitution with a more abundant and less expensive resource, as Simon predicted.

Proposed second wager edit

In 1995, Simon issued a challenge for a second bet. Ehrlich declined, and proposed instead that they bet on a metric for human welfare. Ehrlich offered Simon a set of 15 metrics over 10 years, victor to be determined by scientists chosen by the president of the National Academy of Sciences in 2005. There was no meeting of minds, because Simon felt that too many of the metric's measured attributes of the world were not directly related to human welfare, e.g. the amount of nitrous oxide in the atmosphere.[55] For such indirect, supposedly bad indicators to be considered "bad", they would ultimately have to have some measurable detrimental effect on actual human welfare. Ehrlich refused to leave out measures considered by Simon to be immaterial.

Simon summarized the bet with the following analogy:

Let me characterize their [Ehrlich and Schneider's] offer as follows. I predict, and this is for real, that the average performances in the next Olympics will be better than those in the last Olympics. On average, the performances have gotten better, Olympics to Olympics, for a variety of reasons. What Ehrlich and others say is that they don't want to bet on athletic performances, they want to bet on the conditions of the track, or the weather, or the officials, or any other such indirect measure.[56]

Theory edit

Simon's 1981 book The Ultimate Resource is a criticism of what was then the conventional wisdom on resource scarcity, published within the context of the cultural background created by the best-selling and highly influential book The Population Bomb in 1968 by Paul R. Ehrlich and The Limits to Growth analysis published in 1972. The Ultimate Resource challenged the conventional wisdom on population growth, raw-material scarcity and resource consumption. Simon argues that our notions of increasing resource scarcity ignore the long-term declines in wage-adjusted raw material prices. Viewed economically, he argues, increasing wealth and technology make more resources available; although supplies may be limited physically they may be regarded as economically indefinite as old resources are recycled and new alternatives are assumed to be developed by the market. Simon challenged the notion of an impending Malthusian catastrophe—that an increase in population has negative economic consequences; that population is a drain on natural resources; and that we stand at risk of running out of resources through over-consumption. Simon argues that population is the solution to resource scarcities and environmental problems, since people and markets innovate. His ideas were praised by Nobel Laureate economists Friedrich Hayek[57] and Milton Friedman, the latter in a 1998 foreword to The Ultimate Resource II, but they have also attracted critics such as Paul R. Ehrlich, Albert Allen Bartlett and Herman Daly.

Simon examined different raw materials, especially metals and their prices in historical times. He assumed that besides temporary shortfalls, in the long run prices for raw materials remain at similar levels or even decrease. E.g. aluminium was never as expensive as before 1886 and steel used for medieval armor carried a much higher price tag in current dollars than any modern parallel. A recent discussion of commodity index long-term trends supported his positions.[58]

His 1984 book The Resourceful Earth (co-edited by Herman Kahn), is a similar criticism of the conventional wisdom on population growth and resource consumption and a direct response to the Global 2000 report. For example, it predicted that "There is no compelling reason to believe that world oil prices will rise in the coming decades. In fact, prices may well fall below current levels". Indeed, oil prices trended downward for nearly the next 2 decades, before rising above 1984 levels in about 2003 or 2004. Oil prices have subsequently risen and fallen, and risen again. In 2008, the price of crude oil reached $100 per barrel, a level last attained in the 1860s (inflation adjusted). Later in 2008, the price again sharply fell, to a low of about $40, before rising again to a high around $125. Since mid-2011, prices were slowly trending downward until the middle of 2014, but falling dramatically until the end of 2015 to ca. $30. Since then prices were relatively stable (below $50).[59]

Simon was skeptical, in 1994, of claims that human activity caused global environmental damage, notably in relation to CFCs, ozone depletion and climate change.

Simon also claimed that numerous environmental damage and health dangers from pollution were "definitely disproved". These included lead pollution & IQ, DDT, PCBs, malathion, Agent Orange, asbestos, and the chemical contamination at Love Canal.[60] He dismissed such concerns as a mere "value judgement."

But also, to a startling degree, the decision about whether the overall effect of a child or migrant is positive or negative depends on the values of whoever is making the judgment – your preference to spend a dollar now rather than to wait for a dollar-plus-something in twenty or thirty years, your preferences for having more or fewer wild animals alive as opposed to more or fewer human beings alive, and so on.[61]

Influence edit

Simon was one of the founders of free-market environmentalism. An article entitled "The Doomslayer"[29] profiling Julian Simon in Wired magazine inspired Danish Bjørn Lomborg to write the book The Skeptical Environmentalist.

Simon was also the first to suggest that airlines should provide incentives for travelers to give up their seats on overbooked flights, rather than arbitrarily taking random passengers off the plane (a practice known as "bumping").[57] Although the airline industry initially rejected it, his plan was later implemented with resounding success, as recounted by Milton Friedman in the foreword to The Ultimate Resource II. Economist James Heins said in 2009 that the practice had added $100 billion to the United States economy in the last 30 years.[62] Simon gave away his idea to federal de-regulators and never received any personal profit from his solution.[62]

Although not all of Simon's arguments were universally accepted, they contributed to a shift in opinion in the literature on demographic economics from a strongly Malthusian negative view of population growth to a more neutral view.[not specific enough to verify][citation needed] More recent theoretical developments, based on the ideas of the demographic dividend and demographic window, have contributed to another shift, this time away from the debate viewing population growth as either good or bad.[citation needed]

Simon wrote a memoir, A Life Against the Grain, which was published by his wife after his death.

Criticism edit

Jared Diamond in his book Collapse, Albert Bartlett and Garrett Hardin describe Simon as being too optimistic and some of his assumptions being not in line with natural limitations.

We now have in our hands—really, in our libraries—the technology to feed, clothe, and supply energy to an ever-growing population for the next seven billion years. (Simon along The State of Humanity: Steadily Improving 1995[63])

Diamond claims that a continued stable growth rate of earth's population would result in extreme over-population long before the suggested time limit. Regarding the attributed population predictions Simon did not specify that he was assuming a fixed growth rate as Diamond, Bartlett and Hardin have done. Simon argued that people do not become poorer as the population expands; increasing numbers produce what they needed to support themselves, and have and will prosper while food prices sink.

There is no reason to believe that at any given moment in the future the available quantity of any natural resource or service at present prices will be much smaller than it is now, or non-existent.

— Simon in The Ultimate Resource, 1981

Diamond believes, and finds absurd, Simon implies it would be possible to produce metals, e.g. copper, from other elements.[64] For Simon, human resource needs are comparably small compared to the wealth of nature. He therefore argued physical limitations play a minor role and shortages of raw materials tend to be local and temporary. The main scarcity pointed out by Simon is the amount of human brain power (i.e. "The Ultimate Resource") which allows for the perpetuation of human activities for practically unlimited time. For example, before copper ore became scarce and prices soared due to global increasing demand for copper wires and cablings, the global data and telecommunication networks have switched to glass fiber backbone networks.

This is my long-run forecast in brief, ... The material conditions of life will continue to get better for most people, in most countries, most of the time, indefinitely. Within a century or two, all nations and most of humanity will be at or above today's Western living standards. I also speculate, however, that many people will continue to think and say that the conditions of life are getting worse.[29]

This and other quotations in Wired are supposed to be the reason for Bjørn Lomborg's The Skeptical Environmentalist. Lomborg has stated that he began his research as an attempt to counter what he saw as Simons' anti-ecological arguments but changed his mind after starting to analyze the data.

Herman Daly, an American ecological and Georgist economist, criticized Simon for committing profound mistakes and exaggerations, for denial of resource finitude and for his views that neither ecology nor entropy exists.[65]

Legacy edit

The Institute for the Study of Labor established the annual Julian L. Simon Lecture to honor Simon's work in population economics.[66] The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign held a symposium discussing Simon's work on April 24, 2002.[67] The university also established the Julian Simon Memorial Faculty Scholar Endowment to fund an associate faculty member in the business school.[67] India's Liberty Institute also holds a Julian Simon Memorial Lecture.[68] The Competitive Enterprise Institute gives the Julian Simon Memorial Award annually to an economist in the vein of Simon; the first recipient was Stephen Moore, who had served as a research fellow under Simon in the 1980s.[53]

Personal life edit

Simon was remembered as a traditionalist Jew who did not work on the Sabbath.[69] He emphasized empirical data in arguments and had a combative personality which enjoyed rhetorical exchanges.[15] His wife, Rita James, was a former socialist activist; they met while students at the University of Chicago and married during that period.[22] She was a longtime member of the faculty at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and later became a public affairs professor at American University.[70][71] They had three children: David, Judith, and Daniel.[72]

For a long time, Simon experienced debilitating depression,[73] which allowed him to work only a few productive hours in a day. He also studied the psychology of depression and wrote a book[74] on overcoming it. He died on February 8, 1998.[75] The cause was a heart attack at his home in Chevy Chase in 1998; he died at age 65.[11]

Honors edit

Works edit

  • Simon, Julian (August 1981). The Ultimate Resource (Hardcover ed.). Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 069109389X. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  • Simon, Julian L (1996). The Ultimate Resource 2 (Paperback ed.). Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691042691. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  • The Resourceful Earth: A Response to "Global 2000" (1984), ISBN 0-631-13467-0, Julian Simon & Herman Kahn, eds
  • The Economic Consequences of Immigration into the United States
  • Effort, Opportunity, and Wealth: Some Economics of the Human Spirit
  • Good Mood: The New Psychology of Overcoming Depression ISBN 0-8126-9098-2 (Forewords by Albert Ellis and Kenneth Colby)
  • The Hoodwinking of a Nation ISBN 1-56000-434-7 (hard), ISBN 1-4128-0593-7 (soft)
  • A Life Against the Grain: The Autobiography of an Unconventional Economist ISBN 0-7658-0532-4
  • Scarcity or Abundance? A Debate on the Environment (1994), (with Norman Myers), ISBN 0-393-03590-5
  • The Philosophy and Practice of Resampling Statistics
  • Basic research methods in social sciences: The art of empirical investigation, ISBN 0-394-32049-2
  • Resampling: A Better Way to Teach (and Do) Statistics (with Peter C. Bruce)
  • The Science and Art of Thinking Well in Science, Business, the Arts, and Love
  • Economics of Population: Key Modern Writings, ISBN 1-85278-765-1
  • The State of Humanity, ISBN 1-55786-585-X
  • It's Getting Better All the Time : 100 Greatest Trends of the Last 100 Years by Stephen Moore, Julian Lincoln Simon ISBN 1-882577-97-3 manuscript finished posthumously by Stephen Moore

References edit

  1. ^ Tierney, John (December 2, 1990). "Betting on the Planet". The New York Times. Retrieved February 5, 2024.
  2. ^ Moore, Stephen (October 5, 2007). "Clear-Eyed Optimists". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved February 5, 2024.
  3. ^ "Last Words". The Washington Post. 1998-02-22. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  4. ^ "Obituary: Julian Simon". The Independent. 1998-03-13. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
  5. ^ Moffett, George (1994-06-22). "The population question revisited". The Wilson Quarterly. 18 (3): 54–78.
  6. ^ Sastry, Anjali (2018-01-22). "Systems Lessons of the Global Problematique: Valuing Connection". Journal of Design and Science. MIT Press. doi:10.21428/97ff26fd.
  7. ^ Kestenbaum, David (January 2, 2014). "A Bet, Five Metals And The Future Of The Planet". NPR. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
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  9. ^ Sabin, Paul (2014-09-12). "Want to Bet?". Slate. ISSN 1091-2339. Retrieved 2024-02-04.
  10. ^ Carlin, Scott (March 3, 1998). "Simon's Solution to 'Bumping'". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved February 5, 2024.
  11. ^ a b Gilpin, Kenneth N. (12 February 2019). "Julian Simon, 65, Optimistic Economist, Dies". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
  12. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 65.
  13. ^ a b c Sabin 2013, p. 66.
  14. ^ "Eleven Seniors Win College Scholarships". The Millburn-Short Hills Item. Millburn, New Jersey. June 16, 1949. p. 1. Retrieved February 1, 2024.
  15. ^ a b Sabin 2013, p. 64.
  16. ^ a b c Simon, Julian L. (June 4, 1998). "Julian L. Simon | Curriculum Vitae". Retrieved February 1, 2024.
  17. ^ Spaulding, Barbara (March 9, 1950). "College Corner". The Millburn-Short Hills Item. Millburn, New Jersey. p. 7. Retrieved February 1, 2024.
  18. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 68.
  19. ^ "Population & The Environment: Julian Simon". Acton Institute. 2024-02-01. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  20. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 70–71.
  21. ^ a b Barnes, Bart (1998-02-11). "Iconoclastic Economist Julian Simon Dies". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  22. ^ a b Sabin 2013, p. 71.
  23. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 71–72.
  24. ^ Whaples 2023, p. 272.
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  26. ^ Whaples 2023, p. 273.
  27. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 76.
  28. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 78.
  29. ^ a b c Regis, Ed (February 1997). . Wired. Archived from the original on 2008-05-16. Retrieved 2008-05-18.
  30. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 78–79.
  31. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 62.
  32. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 63–64, 79.
  33. ^ a b Sabin 2013, p. 63.
  34. ^ Harrington, Walt (1985-08-18). "The Heretic Becomes Respectable". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2024-02-04.
  35. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 93.
  36. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 79–81.
  37. ^ a b Sabin 2013, p. 94.
  38. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 94–95.
  39. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 95–96.
  40. ^ "Julian L. Simon, 65, professor at UM, expert on population, demographics". The Baltimore Sun. 1998-02-12. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  41. ^ a b Sunstein, Cass R. (December 5, 2013). "The Battle of Two Hedgehogs". The New York Review of Books. ISSN 0028-7504. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
  42. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 131–132.
  43. ^ a b Sabin 2013, p. 133.
  44. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 132.
  45. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 132–133.
  46. ^ a b c d Sabin 2013, p. 134.
  47. ^ Bailey, Ronald (2013-09-13). "Betting on Humanity's Future". Reason. Retrieved 2024-02-06.
  48. ^ Sabin 2013, pp. 2–3; Nicholson 2016, p. 425
  49. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 3, 12.
  50. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 3.
  51. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 134–135.
  52. ^ a b Sabin 2013, p. 135.
  53. ^ a b . Competitive Enterprise Institute. Archived from the original on 2002-09-20. Retrieved 2009-09-04.
  54. ^ Dan Gardner (2010). Future Babble: Why Expert Predictions Fail – and Why We Believe Them Anyway. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart. p. 232.
  55. ^ . DIE OFF. Archived from the original on 2008-05-15. Retrieved 2008-05-18.
  56. ^ . Overpopulation.com. Archived from the original on 2007-07-01. Retrieved 2008-05-13. Which cites: Miele, Frank. "Living without limits: an interview with Julian Simon." Skeptic, vol. 5, no. 1, 1997, p. 57.
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  59. ^ "Brent Crude Oil Spot Price". Retrieved 2016-07-17.
  60. ^ The Ultimate Resource 2, pp. 260–65
  61. ^ Simon, Julian L. "Ultimate Resource: Introduction". juliansimon.com.
  62. ^ a b Dennis, Jan. "Airline overbooking policy well known and so, too, should be its creator". On Our Watch. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Retrieved 2009-09-04.
  63. ^ Simon, Julian L. (September–October 1995). . Cato Policy Report. Cato Institute. Archived from the original on 2008-05-18. Retrieved 2008-05-18.
  64. ^ Diamond bases his criticism upon the fact that the transmutation of elements on a large scale is not currently possible. In theory, transmutation could allow humans to one day produce copper from other elements, but this would require significant breakthroughs in knowledge and technology in order to overcome the enormous barriers currently preventing this (i.e. the extremely large amounts of energy required to generate extremely small quantities)
  65. ^ Ultimate confusion: The economics of Julian Simon by Herman E.Daly
  66. ^ . Institute for the Study of Labor. Archived from the original on 2011-06-16. Retrieved 2009-09-04.
  67. ^ a b . Inside Illinois. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Archived from the original on 2010-08-10. Retrieved 2009-09-04.
  68. ^ . Liberty Institute. Archived from the original on 2006-12-10. Retrieved 2009-09-04.
  69. ^ Wattenberg, Ben (February 11, 1998). "Malthus, Watch Out". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  70. ^ Barnes, Bart (2023-08-26). "Rita J. Simon, AU professor, dies at 81". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2024-02-05.
  71. ^ Tierney, John (December 27, 2010). "Economic Optimism? Yes, I'll Take That Bet". The New York Times. Retrieved February 1, 2024.
  72. ^ Sabin 2013, p. 72.
  73. ^ Doherty, Brian (1998-05-01). "In Memoriam: Julian Simon". Reason. Retrieved 2024-02-01.
  74. ^ "Good Mood: The New Psychology of Overcoming Depression". Juliansimon.com. 1999-06-13. Retrieved 2012-05-20.
  75. ^ Boudreaux & Hamowy 2008, p. 463.

Additional sources edit

  • Swaney, James A. (June 1991). "Julian Simon versus the Ehrlichs: An Institutionalist Perspective". Journal of Economic Issues. 25 (2): 499–509. JSTOR 4226431.
  • Ahlburg, Dennis A. (June 1998). "Julian Simon and the Population Growth Debate". Population and Development Review. 24 (2): 317–327. doi:10.2307/2807977. JSTOR 2807977.
  • Panayotou, Theodore (July 2000). "Population and Environment" (PDF). Environment and Development. Working Papers (54). Harvard University.
  • Trewavas, Anthony (2001). "Open debate is essential on conservation issues". Nature. 414: 581–582. doi:10.1038/414581d.
  • Giles, Jim (May 15, 2003). "The man they love to hate". Nature. 423: 216–218. doi:10.1038/423216a.
  • Hall, Peter (May 2003). "A Short Prehistory of the Bootstrap". Statistical Science. 18 (2). Institute of Mathematical Statistics: 158–167. JSTOR 3182845.
  • Kern, William S. (September 2003). "Mcculloch, Scrope, and Hodgskin: Nineteenth-Century Versions of Julian Simon". Journal of the History of Economic Thought. 25 (3): 289–301. doi:10.1080/1042771032000114737.
  • Boudreaux, Donald (2008). "Simon, Julian (1932–1998)". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publishing. pp. 463–64. doi:10.4135/9781412965811.n284. ISBN 978-1-4129-6580-4. LCCN 2008009151. OCLC 750831024.
  • Sabin, Paul (2013). The Bet: Paul Ehrlich, Julian Simon, and Our Gamble Over Earth's Future. Yale University Press. ISBN 9780300176483.
  • Wagner, John E.; Newman, David H. (Spring 2013). "The Simon–Ehrlich Bet: Teaching Relative vs. Absolute Scarcity". The American Economist. 58 (1): 16–26. JSTOR 43664817.
  • Christensen, Jon (August 14, 2013). "Environmental policy: The biggest wager". Nature. 500: 273–274. doi:10.1038/500273a.
  • Mayhew, Robert J. (April 28, 2014). Malthus: The Life and Legacies of an Untimely Prophet. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674419414.
  • Hall, Ray (Spring 2015). "Population and the future". Geography. 100 (1): 36–44. JSTOR 43825412.
  • Crane, Jeff (May 2016). "Review of The Bet by Paul Sabin". The History Teacher. 49 (3): 474–475. JSTOR 24810561.
  • Nicholson, Simon (Winter 2016). "The Birth of Free-Market Environmentalism". The Journal of Interdisciplinary History. 46 (3). MIT Press: 421–433. JSTOR 43829788.
  • Pooley, Gale; Tupy, Marian (June 29, 2020). "Luck or insight? The Simon–Ehrlich bet re-examined". Economic Affairs. 40 (2): 277–280. doi:10.1111/ecaf.12398.
  • Desrochers, Pierre; Vincent, Geloso; Szurmak, Joanna (March 2021). "Care to Wager Again? An Appraisal of Paul Ehrlich's Counterbet Offer to Julian Simon, Part 1: Outcomes". Social Science Quarterly. 102 (2): 786–807. doi:10.1111/ssqu.12928.
  • Desrochers, Pierre; Vincent, Geloso; Szurmak, Joanna (March 2021). "Care to Wager Again? An Appraisal of Paul Ehrlich's Counterbet Offer to Julian Simon, Part 2: Critical Analysis". Social Science Quarterly. 102 (2): 808–829. doi:10.1111/ssqu.12920.
  • Geloso, Vincent (March 9, 2022). "Statogenic climate change? Julian Simon and Institutions". The Review of Austrian Economics. 35: 343–358. SSRN 3843697.
  • Emmett, Ross B.; Grabowski, Jesse (March 2022). "Better lucky than good: The Simon-Ehrlich bet through the lens of financial economics". Ecological Economics. 193. doi:10.1016/j.ecolecon.2021.107322. ISSN 0921-8009.
  • Vettese, Troy (September 2023). "Hayek against Malthus: Julian Simon's Neoliberal Critique of Environmentalism". Critical Historical Studies. 10 (2). University of Chicago Press: 283–311. doi:10.1086/726753. eISSN 2326-4470. ISSN 2326-4462.
  • Whaples, Robert M. (October 1, 2023). "Julian Simon: Irreplaceable Economist, Irreplaceable Man". The Independent Review. 28 (2): 271–280.
  • Albert A. Bartlett. (revised version).

Further reading edit

  • Desrochers, Pierre and Vincent Geloso, "Snatching the Wrong Conclusions from the Jaws of Defeat: A Historical/Resourceship Perspective on Paul Sabin's The Bet: Paul Ehrlich, Julian Simon, and Our Gamble over Earth's Future (Yale University Press, 2013), Part 2: The Wager: Protagonists and Lessons." New Perspectives on Political Economy, vol. 12, no. 1-2 (2016), pp. 42–64.
  • Desrochers, Pierre and Vincent Geloso, "Snatching the Wrong Conclusions from the Jaws of Defeat: A Historical/Resourceship Perspective on Paul Sabin's The Bet: Paul Ehrlich, Julian Simon, and Our Gamble over Earth's Future (Yale University Press, 2013). Part 1: The Missing History of Thought: Depletionism vs Resourceship." New Perspectives on Political Economy, vol. 12, no. 1-2 (2016), pp. 5–41.

Books critical of Julian Simon:

  • Ehrlich, Paul R. Betrayal of Science and Reason: How Anti-Environmental Rhetoric Threatens Our Future, 1996. (ISBN 1-55963-483-9)
  • Grant, Lindsey. Elephants in the Volkswagen, 1992. (ISBN 0-7167-2268-2)
  • Hardin, Garrett. The Ostrich Factor: Our Population Myopia, 1998. (ISBN 0-19-512274-7)

External links edit

  • Writings by Julian L. Simon, juliansimon.org
  • The Ultimate Resource II: People, Materials, and Environment, juliansimon.org
  • Julian Simon papers at the University of Maryland libraries
  • FMN and Heartland: "Remembering Julian Simon"
  • Reason Magazine: "David Foreman vs. the Cornucopians"
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
  • MIT Technology Review: Environmental Heresies
  • MercatorNet: Population
  • Julian L. Simon papers at the University of WyomingAmerican Heritage Center
  • Critique of 'The Ultimate Resource' by Herman Daly, 1991
  • Ernest Partridge, "Perilous Optimism", 2007, gadfly.igc.org—a criticism of Simon and Sagoff; "Prof. Simon's ideas have been universally dismissed by environmental scientists as crackpot, and yet he was something of a hero among libertarians, neo-classical economists, and their political disciples."
  • Simon, Julian L., encyclopedia.com
  • Simon, Julian (1932-1998), libertarianism.org
  • CV

julian, simon, other, people, named, disambiguation, julian, lincoln, simon, february, 1932, february, 1998, american, economist, professor, economics, business, administration, university, illinois, from, 1963, 1983, before, later, moving, university, marylan. For other people named Julian Simon see Julian Simon disambiguation Julian Lincoln Simon February 12 1932 February 8 1998 was an American economist 1 He was a professor of economics and business administration at the University of Illinois from 1963 to 1983 before later moving to the University of Maryland where he taught for the remainder of his academic career 2 Julian SimonBorn 1932 02 12 February 12 1932Newark New Jersey U S DiedFebruary 8 1998 1998 02 08 aged 65 Chevy Chase Maryland U S NationalityAmericanEducationHarvard University BA University of Chicago MBA PhD Known forSimon Ehrlich wagerThe Ultimate Resource 1981 Academic careerInstitutionsUniversity of IllinoisHebrew University of JerusalemUniversity of MarylandCato InstituteFieldApplied economics Business economics Environmental economicsSchool ortraditionChicago School of EconomicsSimon wrote many books and articles mostly on economic subjects from an optimistic viewpoint 3 He is best known for his work on population natural resources and immigration 4 5 Simon is sometimes associated with cornucopian views and as a critic of Malthusianism 6 Rather than focus on the abundance of nature Simon focused on lasting economic benefits from continuous population growth even despite limited or finite physical resources primarily by the power of human ingenuity to create substitutes and from technological progress citation needed He is also known for the famous Simon Ehrlich wager a bet he made with ecologist Paul R Ehrlich 7 8 Ehrlich bet that the prices for five metals would increase over a decade while Simon took the opposite stance Simon won the bet as the prices for the metals sharply declined during that decade 9 10 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Wager with Ehrlich 3 1 Proposed second wager 4 Theory 4 1 Influence 5 Criticism 6 Legacy 7 Personal life 8 Honors 9 Works 10 References 10 1 Additional sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life and education editSimon was born in Newark New Jersey on February 12 1932 11 He grew up in a Jewish family who migrated to Newark as part of a wave of Jews who moved into the suburbs His grandparents owned a hardware store in the city s downtown In 1941 he moved with his parents to Millburn New Jersey where they experienced significant financial insecurity 12 At the age of 12 Simon became estranged from his father who he saw as distant except when I did something that annoyed him 13 He developed a closer relationship with his mother and two aunts Reflecting on his childhood he later recalled that he had little joy and fewer celebrations and happy moments 13 Simon joined the Boy Scouts of America and became an Eagle Scout at age 14 His experience being hazed as a scout influenced a worldview which disliked elitism and sympathized with what he described as the struggling poor the powerless and those denied opportunity by circumstance 13 He was educated at the local Millburn High School 14 In his autobiography A Life Against the Grain Simon wrote that I first learned to say Do you want to bet when arguing with his father He would say outrageously wrong things in an authoritative fashion and refuse to hear any questions There really was nothing I could say except Do you want to bet 15 Simon studied experimental psychology as an undergraduate at Harvard University where he also took graduate courses in the subject and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts B A in 1953 At Harvard Simon was a member of its Reserve Officers Training Corps program and attended on a full scholarship provided by the Holloway Plan 16 He was active as a member of the university s debate team 17 To help defray his expenses Simon worked various jobs including those as a salesman clerk and factory worker and used his winnings from daily poker games Among his close friends in college was sculptor Aristides Demetrios 18 From 1953 to 1956 Simon served as an officer in the U S Navy on USS Samuel B Roberts He was also stationed at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina for the U S Marine Corps In 1957 he began graduate studies at the University of Chicago where he received a Master of Business Administration M B A in 1959 and a Doctor of Philosophy Ph D in business economics in 1961 19 16 He came under the influence of economists Milton Friedman Friedrich Hayek and Theodore Schultz who were all based at the university 20 Career editFrom 1961 to 1963 Simon operated Julian Simon Associates an agency for mail orders and advertising 21 He had moved to New York with his wife Rita James to start a business However he complained of his encounters with regulatory restrictions which he called tyranny of bureaucracy 22 Simon resolved to write a book about direct mail and sought an academic position During a time of rapid expansion among universities he obtained a position as a professor of advertising at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign 23 His time owning a personal business would have an effect on his economic perspectives 24 Simon would spend most of his adult life in academia 25 He published widely on topics concerning advertising and marketing later broadly researching subjects from library storage to suicide to airline overbooking 26 At the University of Illinois he switched in 1966 to teach marketing there His research focuses shifted towards addressing population growth Simon used his previous experience in marketing towards promoting birth control articles he published recommended campaigns for family planning He drew the attention of W Parker Mauldin of the Population Council who arranged for him to visit India to research possible ways to advertise birth control His initial assumptions held that an increasing population were accompanied by serious economic threats After calculating the costs and benefits of family planning he concluded that countries could gain financially by averting births and advocated stronger investments in planning programs 27 Essays by economists Simon Kuznets and Richard Easterlin in 1967 greatly influenced Simon who began to be increasingly skeptical about the implications of population growth as he researched fertility rates Kuznets and Easterlin argued that the historical data demonstrated that population growth had no negative effect on economic growth Simon credited their findings as leading to his skeptic outlook He also came to be influenced by Danish economist Ester Boserup who found that in contrast to Thomas Malthus a growing population determined the most efficient agricultural practices 28 29 During a 1969 visit to Washington D C Simon experienced an epiphany at the Marine Corps War Memorial He later wrote And then I thought Have I gone crazy What business do I have trying to help arrange it that fewer human beings will be born each one of whom might be a Mozart or a Michelangelo or an Einstein or simply a joy to his or her family and community and a person who will enjoy life 30 In February 1970 Simon took the place of psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton to speak at a faculty forum in his home city of Urbana Illinois His talk was titled Science Does Not Show There Is Over Population He declared I view the population explosion not as a disaster but as a triumph for mankind Whether population growth is too fast or too slow is a value judgment not a scientific one 31 The talk gained attention among his colleagues and he was invited to speak at the 1970 Earth Day in Urbana Simon spoke to a large audience after Planned Parenthood president Alan Frank Guttmacher he delivered his skeptical view questioning whether growth and scarcity posed a threat to society 32 Biology professor and colleague Paul Silverman soon rose to the podium and denounced Simon s remarks while Simon was beside him Silverman called him a false prophet who lacks scholarship or substance 33 The event stayed with Simon who now held a grudge against Silverman Two weeks later he soused Silverman at a faculty party and the two scuffled 33 The Washington Post wrote in 1985 that the incident launched Simon s intellectual war 34 In 1969 Simon was named as a professor of economics and business administration at the University of Illinois and would remain in that position until 1983 From 1970 71 and 1974 75 he was a visiting professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem 16 In the early 1970s Simon s academic work largely concerned the relationship between population and fertility He wrote primarily in economic demographic and developmental journals 35 By 1975 his published articles argued that there were economic gains from population growth contrary to assumptions that growth lead to reduced investment They came amid growing fears by environmental activists who drew from biologist Paul R Ehrlich s 1968 book The Population Bomb and the Club of Rome s 1972 report The Limits to Growth 36 By then the view of scarcity among economists such as Simon Robert Solow and William Nordhaus differed from ecologists Economists posited that scarcity was a changing dynamic variable rather than the more commonly espoused view among scientists that it was a constraint which caused an ecological collapse 37 Simon took an aggressive approach in attacking what had been the dominant consensus on population growth He issued rhetorical challenges that distinguished him from and went further than other economists A stronger belief in the free market also set him apart from Nordhaus and Solow who were part of the mainstream 38 Political progressives and environmentalists saw his views as being overly optimistic 37 Even as environmental pessimists gained greater influence in policy decisions under President Jimmy Carter Simon and other optimists intensified their criticisms of population control and environmental regulations 39 Simon moved in 1983 to join the faculty of the University of Maryland College Park as a professor in its Robert H Smith School of Business where he remained for the rest of his academic career 21 He was a member of the American Economics Association the American Statistics Association and the Population Association of America 40 Wager with Ehrlich editMain article Simon Ehrlich wager nbsp Distinguished scientist Paul R Ehrlich pictured in 1974 predicted that multiple crises would occur in the 1970s including a dramatic decrease in life expectancy and the need for food rationing 41 Simon and Paul R Ehrlich first directly encountered each other in the summer of 1980 when Simon vehemently debunked claims by Newsweek and the United Nations both of which had overestimated the death toll caused by a drought in West Africa from 1968 to 1973 His rebuttals published in Science journal and The Washington Post were also aimed at environmental doomers Simon rejected Ehrlich s claim in The Population Bomb that limited food supply may necessarily require population control and also rejected that humanity was reaching its ecological limit a claim popularized by The Limits of Growth 42 He blamed the popularity for such exaggerated assertions as bad news sells books newspapers and magazines 43 Simon explained that technological advancements would alleviate scarcity because we find new lodes invent better production methods and discover new substitutes 44 In December 1980 Ehrlich and his wife Anne Ehrlich along with colleagues John Holdren and John Harte issued criticisms in Science of Simon s rebuttals Arguing that technology was not sufficient to replace essential ecological systems they asserted that a scarcity of energy and minerals remained a present danger They dismissed Simon s writing as being a tired old argument with striking misconceptions which reflected economists who know nothing about geology 45 Biologist Wayne Davis at the University of Kentucky disputed a claim made by Simon s article that oil prices would decrease saying it defies logic 43 Ehrlich and Simon s dispute would continue into the next year with additional publications against each other in Social Science Quarterly 46 Simon wrote in 1981 How often does a prophet have to be wrong before we no longer believe that he or she is a true prophet 47 Simon believed that Ehrlich s assumptions about demographics were erroneous and that his public statements had not experienced the consequences of being wrong 46 In 1969 Ehrlich said that If I were a gambler I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000 46 He predicted that in the absence of global population control widespread nuclear war disease scarcity or dire resource scarcity would occur as a result of overpopulation 46 Ehrlich garnered broad public attention for his views and disseminated his concerns in the Saturday Review Playboy Penthouse and on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson where he was a frequent guest and had at least 20 appearances 48 In 1970 Ehrlich delivered 100 public lectures and appeared on 200 radio and television shows His highly publicized engagements earned him celebrity status as a scientist 49 Simon later recalled of Ehrlich Here was a guy reaching a vast audience leading his juggernaut of environmentalist hysteria and I felt utterly helpless 50 Wanting to put my money where my mouth is Simon challenged Ehrlich to a scientific wager to test their theories regarding future resource abundance betting on the future prices of raw material 51 If Ehrlich s belief that population growth would increase scarcity was correct then the prices of the metals would increase due to heightened demand Simon believed that technological advancements would reduce scarcity and so he predicted a decrease in prices over time 41 Ehrlich agreed to the offer He commented that he would accept Simon s astonishing offer before other greedy people jump in 52 He consulted Harte and Holdren to devise a basket of five metals that they thought would rise in price with increasing scarcity and depletion They chose chromium copper nickel tin and tungsten 52 Simon won the bet with all five metals dropping in price 53 54 The price of tin went down because of an increased use of aluminium a much more abundant useful and inexpensive material Better mining technologies allowed for the discovery of vast nickel lodes which ended the near monopoly that was enjoyed on the market Tungsten fell due to the rise of the use of ceramics in cookware The price of chromium fell due to better smelting techniques The price of copper began to fall due to the invention of fiber optic cable which is derived from sand which serves a number of the functions once reserved only for copper wire In all of these cases better technology allowed for either more efficient use of existing resources or substitution with a more abundant and less expensive resource as Simon predicted Proposed second wager edit In 1995 Simon issued a challenge for a second bet Ehrlich declined and proposed instead that they bet on a metric for human welfare Ehrlich offered Simon a set of 15 metrics over 10 years victor to be determined by scientists chosen by the president of the National Academy of Sciences in 2005 There was no meeting of minds because Simon felt that too many of the metric s measured attributes of the world were not directly related to human welfare e g the amount of nitrous oxide in the atmosphere 55 For such indirect supposedly bad indicators to be considered bad they would ultimately have to have some measurable detrimental effect on actual human welfare Ehrlich refused to leave out measures considered by Simon to be immaterial Simon summarized the bet with the following analogy Let me characterize their Ehrlich and Schneider s offer as follows I predict and this is for real that the average performances in the next Olympics will be better than those in the last Olympics On average the performances have gotten better Olympics to Olympics for a variety of reasons What Ehrlich and others say is that they don t want to bet on athletic performances they want to bet on the conditions of the track or the weather or the officials or any other such indirect measure 56 Theory editSimon s 1981 book The Ultimate Resource is a criticism of what was then the conventional wisdom on resource scarcity published within the context of the cultural background created by the best selling and highly influential book The Population Bomb in 1968 by Paul R Ehrlich and The Limits to Growth analysis published in 1972 The Ultimate Resource challenged the conventional wisdom on population growth raw material scarcity and resource consumption Simon argues that our notions of increasing resource scarcity ignore the long term declines in wage adjusted raw material prices Viewed economically he argues increasing wealth and technology make more resources available although supplies may be limited physically they may be regarded as economically indefinite as old resources are recycled and new alternatives are assumed to be developed by the market Simon challenged the notion of an impending Malthusian catastrophe that an increase in population has negative economic consequences that population is a drain on natural resources and that we stand at risk of running out of resources through over consumption Simon argues that population is the solution to resource scarcities and environmental problems since people and markets innovate His ideas were praised by Nobel Laureate economists Friedrich Hayek 57 and Milton Friedman the latter in a 1998 foreword to The Ultimate Resource II but they have also attracted critics such as Paul R Ehrlich Albert Allen Bartlett and Herman Daly Simon examined different raw materials especially metals and their prices in historical times He assumed that besides temporary shortfalls in the long run prices for raw materials remain at similar levels or even decrease E g aluminium was never as expensive as before 1886 and steel used for medieval armor carried a much higher price tag in current dollars than any modern parallel A recent discussion of commodity index long term trends supported his positions 58 His 1984 book The Resourceful Earth co edited by Herman Kahn is a similar criticism of the conventional wisdom on population growth and resource consumption and a direct response to the Global 2000 report For example it predicted that There is no compelling reason to believe that world oil prices will rise in the coming decades In fact prices may well fall below current levels Indeed oil prices trended downward for nearly the next 2 decades before rising above 1984 levels in about 2003 or 2004 Oil prices have subsequently risen and fallen and risen again In 2008 the price of crude oil reached 100 per barrel a level last attained in the 1860s inflation adjusted Later in 2008 the price again sharply fell to a low of about 40 before rising again to a high around 125 Since mid 2011 prices were slowly trending downward until the middle of 2014 but falling dramatically until the end of 2015 to ca 30 Since then prices were relatively stable below 50 59 Simon was skeptical in 1994 of claims that human activity caused global environmental damage notably in relation to CFCs ozone depletion and climate change Simon also claimed that numerous environmental damage and health dangers from pollution were definitely disproved These included lead pollution amp IQ DDT PCBs malathion Agent Orange asbestos and the chemical contamination at Love Canal 60 He dismissed such concerns as a mere value judgement But also to a startling degree the decision about whether the overall effect of a child or migrant is positive or negative depends on the values of whoever is making the judgment your preference to spend a dollar now rather than to wait for a dollar plus something in twenty or thirty years your preferences for having more or fewer wild animals alive as opposed to more or fewer human beings alive and so on 61 Influence edit Simon was one of the founders of free market environmentalism An article entitled The Doomslayer 29 profiling Julian Simon in Wired magazine inspired Danish Bjorn Lomborg to write the book The Skeptical Environmentalist Simon was also the first to suggest that airlines should provide incentives for travelers to give up their seats on overbooked flights rather than arbitrarily taking random passengers off the plane a practice known as bumping 57 Although the airline industry initially rejected it his plan was later implemented with resounding success as recounted by Milton Friedman in the foreword to The Ultimate Resource II Economist James Heins said in 2009 that the practice had added 100 billion to the United States economy in the last 30 years 62 Simon gave away his idea to federal de regulators and never received any personal profit from his solution 62 Although not all of Simon s arguments were universally accepted they contributed to a shift in opinion in the literature on demographic economics from a strongly Malthusian negative view of population growth to a more neutral view not specific enough to verify citation needed More recent theoretical developments based on the ideas of the demographic dividend and demographic window have contributed to another shift this time away from the debate viewing population growth as either good or bad citation needed Simon wrote a memoir A Life Against the Grain which was published by his wife after his death Criticism editJared Diamond in his book Collapse Albert Bartlett and Garrett Hardin describe Simon as being too optimistic and some of his assumptions being not in line with natural limitations We now have in our hands really in our libraries the technology to feed clothe and supply energy to an ever growing population for the next seven billion years Simon along The State of Humanity Steadily Improving 1995 63 Diamond claims that a continued stable growth rate of earth s population would result in extreme over population long before the suggested time limit Regarding the attributed population predictions Simon did not specify that he was assuming a fixed growth rate as Diamond Bartlett and Hardin have done Simon argued that people do not become poorer as the population expands increasing numbers produce what they needed to support themselves and have and will prosper while food prices sink There is no reason to believe that at any given moment in the future the available quantity of any natural resource or service at present prices will be much smaller than it is now or non existent Simon in The Ultimate Resource 1981 Diamond believes and finds absurd Simon implies it would be possible to produce metals e g copper from other elements 64 For Simon human resource needs are comparably small compared to the wealth of nature He therefore argued physical limitations play a minor role and shortages of raw materials tend to be local and temporary The main scarcity pointed out by Simon is the amount of human brain power i e The Ultimate Resource which allows for the perpetuation of human activities for practically unlimited time For example before copper ore became scarce and prices soared due to global increasing demand for copper wires and cablings the global data and telecommunication networks have switched to glass fiber backbone networks This is my long run forecast in brief The material conditions of life will continue to get better for most people in most countries most of the time indefinitely Within a century or two all nations and most of humanity will be at or above today s Western living standards I also speculate however that many people will continue to think and say that the conditions of life are getting worse 29 This and other quotations in Wired are supposed to be the reason for Bjorn Lomborg s The Skeptical Environmentalist Lomborg has stated that he began his research as an attempt to counter what he saw as Simons anti ecological arguments but changed his mind after starting to analyze the data Herman Daly an American ecological and Georgist economist criticized Simon for committing profound mistakes and exaggerations for denial of resource finitude and for his views that neither ecology nor entropy exists 65 Legacy editThe Institute for the Study of Labor established the annual Julian L Simon Lecture to honor Simon s work in population economics 66 The University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign held a symposium discussing Simon s work on April 24 2002 67 The university also established the Julian Simon Memorial Faculty Scholar Endowment to fund an associate faculty member in the business school 67 India s Liberty Institute also holds a Julian Simon Memorial Lecture 68 The Competitive Enterprise Institute gives the Julian Simon Memorial Award annually to an economist in the vein of Simon the first recipient was Stephen Moore who had served as a research fellow under Simon in the 1980s 53 Personal life editSimon was remembered as a traditionalist Jew who did not work on the Sabbath 69 He emphasized empirical data in arguments and had a combative personality which enjoyed rhetorical exchanges 15 His wife Rita James was a former socialist activist they met while students at the University of Chicago and married during that period 22 She was a longtime member of the faculty at the University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign and later became a public affairs professor at American University 70 71 They had three children David Judith and Daniel 72 For a long time Simon experienced debilitating depression 73 which allowed him to work only a few productive hours in a day He also studied the psychology of depression and wrote a book 74 on overcoming it He died on February 8 1998 75 The cause was a heart attack at his home in Chevy Chase in 1998 he died at age 65 11 Honors editDoctor honoris causa University of Navarra Spain Economics 1998Works editSimon Julian August 1981 The Ultimate Resource Hardcover ed Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 069109389X Retrieved 6 December 2017 Simon Julian L 1996 The Ultimate Resource 2 Paperback ed Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 0691042691 Retrieved 6 December 2017 The Resourceful Earth A Response to Global 2000 1984 ISBN 0 631 13467 0 Julian Simon amp Herman Kahn eds The Economic Consequences of Immigration into the United States Effort Opportunity and Wealth Some Economics of the Human Spirit Good Mood The New Psychology of Overcoming Depression ISBN 0 8126 9098 2 Forewords by Albert Ellis and Kenneth Colby The Hoodwinking of a Nation ISBN 1 56000 434 7 hard ISBN 1 4128 0593 7 soft A Life Against the Grain The Autobiography of an Unconventional Economist ISBN 0 7658 0532 4 Scarcity or Abundance A Debate on the Environment 1994 with Norman Myers ISBN 0 393 03590 5 The Philosophy and Practice of Resampling Statistics Basic research methods in social sciences The art of empirical investigation ISBN 0 394 32049 2 Resampling A Better Way to Teach and Do Statistics with Peter C Bruce The Science and Art of Thinking Well in Science Business the Arts and Love Economics of Population Key Modern Writings ISBN 1 85278 765 1 The State of Humanity ISBN 1 55786 585 X It s Getting Better All the Time 100 Greatest Trends of the Last 100 Years by Stephen Moore Julian Lincoln Simon ISBN 1 882577 97 3 manuscript finished posthumously by Stephen MooreReferences edit Tierney John December 2 1990 Betting on the Planet The New York Times Retrieved February 5 2024 Moore Stephen October 5 2007 Clear Eyed Optimists The Wall Street Journal Retrieved February 5 2024 Last Words The Washington Post 1998 02 22 ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2024 02 01 Obituary Julian Simon The Independent 1998 03 13 Retrieved 2024 02 06 Moffett George 1994 06 22 The population question revisited The Wilson Quarterly 18 3 54 78 Sastry Anjali 2018 01 22 Systems Lessons of the Global Problematique Valuing Connection Journal of Design and Science MIT Press doi 10 21428 97ff26fd Kestenbaum David January 2 2014 A Bet Five Metals And The Future Of The Planet NPR Retrieved February 4 2024 Tupy Marian L January 12 2023 Why Is Paul Ehrlich So Hard to Ignore The Wall Street Journal Retrieved February 5 2024 Sabin Paul 2014 09 12 Want to Bet Slate ISSN 1091 2339 Retrieved 2024 02 04 Carlin Scott March 3 1998 Simon s Solution to Bumping The Wall Street Journal Retrieved February 5 2024 a b Gilpin Kenneth N 12 February 2019 Julian Simon 65 Optimistic Economist Dies The New York Times Retrieved 30 October 2019 Sabin 2013 p 65 a b c Sabin 2013 p 66 Eleven Seniors Win College Scholarships The Millburn Short Hills Item Millburn New Jersey June 16 1949 p 1 Retrieved February 1 2024 a b Sabin 2013 p 64 a b c Simon Julian L June 4 1998 Julian L Simon Curriculum Vitae Retrieved February 1 2024 Spaulding Barbara March 9 1950 College Corner The Millburn Short Hills Item Millburn New Jersey p 7 Retrieved February 1 2024 Sabin 2013 p 68 Population amp The Environment Julian Simon Acton Institute 2024 02 01 Retrieved 2024 02 01 Sabin 2013 p 70 71 a b Barnes Bart 1998 02 11 Iconoclastic Economist Julian Simon Dies The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2024 02 01 a b Sabin 2013 p 71 Sabin 2013 p 71 72 Whaples 2023 p 272 Obituary Julian Simon The Economist 19 February 1998 Retrieved 12 March 2018 Whaples 2023 p 273 Sabin 2013 p 76 Sabin 2013 p 78 a b c Regis Ed February 1997 The Doomslayer Wired Archived from the original on 2008 05 16 Retrieved 2008 05 18 Sabin 2013 p 78 79 Sabin 2013 p 62 Sabin 2013 p 63 64 79 a b Sabin 2013 p 63 Harrington Walt 1985 08 18 The Heretic Becomes Respectable The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2024 02 04 Sabin 2013 p 93 Sabin 2013 p 79 81 a b Sabin 2013 p 94 Sabin 2013 p 94 95 Sabin 2013 p 95 96 Julian L Simon 65 professor at UM expert on population demographics The Baltimore Sun 1998 02 12 Retrieved 2024 02 01 a b Sunstein Cass R December 5 2013 The Battle of Two Hedgehogs The New York Review of Books ISSN 0028 7504 Retrieved 2024 02 06 Sabin 2013 p 131 132 a b Sabin 2013 p 133 Sabin 2013 p 132 Sabin 2013 p 132 133 a b c d Sabin 2013 p 134 Bailey Ronald 2013 09 13 Betting on Humanity s Future Reason Retrieved 2024 02 06 Sabin 2013 pp 2 3 Nicholson 2016 p 425 Sabin 2013 p 3 12 Sabin 2013 p 3 Sabin 2013 p 134 135 a b Sabin 2013 p 135 a b CEI To Honor Free Market Economist Julian Simon Competitive Enterprise Institute Archived from the original on 2002 09 20 Retrieved 2009 09 04 Dan Gardner 2010 Future Babble Why Expert Predictions Fail and Why We Believe Them Anyway Toronto McClelland and Stewart p 232 The Population Explosion by Paul and Anne Ehrlich DIE OFF Archived from the original on 2008 05 15 Retrieved 2008 05 18 Julian Simon s Bet With Paul Ehrlich Overpopulation com Archived from the original on 2007 07 01 Retrieved 2008 05 13 Which cites Miele Frank Living without limits an interview with Julian Simon Skeptic vol 5 no 1 1997 p 57 a b Neal Larry Julian Simon As Economist PDF Competitive Enterprise Institute Archived from the original PDF on 2004 02 15 Retrieved 2009 09 04 Perry Mark J Julian Simon Still more right than lucky in 2013 American Enterprise Institute Archived from the original on 1 November 2013 Retrieved 24 January 2013 Brent Crude Oil Spot Price Retrieved 2016 07 17 The Ultimate Resource 2 pp 260 65 Simon Julian L Ultimate Resource Introduction juliansimon com a b Dennis Jan Airline overbooking policy well known and so too should be its creator On Our Watch University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Retrieved 2009 09 04 Simon Julian L September October 1995 The State of Humanity Steadily Improving Cato Policy Report Cato Institute Archived from the original on 2008 05 18 Retrieved 2008 05 18 Diamond bases his criticism upon the fact that the transmutation of elements on a large scale is not currently possible In theory transmutation could allow humans to one day produce copper from other elements but this would require significant breakthroughs in knowledge and technology in order to overcome the enormous barriers currently preventing this i e the extremely large amounts of energy required to generate extremely small quantities Ultimate confusion The economics of Julian Simon by Herman E Daly Migration Institute for the Study of Labor Archived from the original on 2011 06 16 Retrieved 2009 09 04 a b Brief Notes Inside Illinois University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign Archived from the original on 2010 08 10 Retrieved 2009 09 04 Julian L Simon Memorial Lecture 2000 Liberty Institute Archived from the original on 2006 12 10 Retrieved 2009 09 04 Wattenberg Ben February 11 1998 Malthus Watch Out The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2024 02 01 Barnes Bart 2023 08 26 Rita J Simon AU professor dies at 81 The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2024 02 05 Tierney John December 27 2010 Economic Optimism Yes I ll Take That Bet The New York Times Retrieved February 1 2024 Sabin 2013 p 72 Doherty Brian 1998 05 01 In Memoriam Julian Simon Reason Retrieved 2024 02 01 Good Mood The New Psychology of Overcoming Depression Juliansimon com 1999 06 13 Retrieved 2012 05 20 Boudreaux amp Hamowy 2008 p 463 Additional sources edit Swaney James A June 1991 Julian Simon versus the Ehrlichs An Institutionalist Perspective Journal of Economic Issues 25 2 499 509 JSTOR 4226431 Ahlburg Dennis A June 1998 Julian Simon and the Population Growth Debate Population and Development Review 24 2 317 327 doi 10 2307 2807977 JSTOR 2807977 Panayotou Theodore July 2000 Population and Environment PDF Environment and Development Working Papers 54 Harvard University Trewavas Anthony 2001 Open debate is essential on conservation issues Nature 414 581 582 doi 10 1038 414581d Giles Jim May 15 2003 The man they love to hate Nature 423 216 218 doi 10 1038 423216a Hall Peter May 2003 A Short Prehistory of the Bootstrap Statistical Science 18 2 Institute of Mathematical Statistics 158 167 JSTOR 3182845 Kern William S September 2003 Mcculloch Scrope and Hodgskin Nineteenth Century Versions of Julian Simon Journal of the History of Economic Thought 25 3 289 301 doi 10 1080 1042771032000114737 Boudreaux Donald 2008 Simon Julian 1932 1998 In Hamowy Ronald ed The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA SAGE Publishing pp 463 64 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n284 ISBN 978 1 4129 6580 4 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 Sabin Paul 2013 The Bet Paul Ehrlich Julian Simon and Our Gamble Over Earth s Future Yale University Press ISBN 9780300176483 Wagner John E Newman David H Spring 2013 The Simon Ehrlich Bet Teaching Relative vs Absolute Scarcity The American Economist 58 1 16 26 JSTOR 43664817 Christensen Jon August 14 2013 Environmental policy The biggest wager Nature 500 273 274 doi 10 1038 500273a Mayhew Robert J April 28 2014 Malthus The Life and Legacies of an Untimely Prophet Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674419414 Hall Ray Spring 2015 Population and the future Geography 100 1 36 44 JSTOR 43825412 Crane Jeff May 2016 Review of The Bet by Paul Sabin The History Teacher 49 3 474 475 JSTOR 24810561 Nicholson Simon Winter 2016 The Birth of Free Market Environmentalism The Journal of Interdisciplinary History 46 3 MIT Press 421 433 JSTOR 43829788 Pooley Gale Tupy Marian June 29 2020 Luck or insight The Simon Ehrlich bet re examined Economic Affairs 40 2 277 280 doi 10 1111 ecaf 12398 Desrochers Pierre Vincent Geloso Szurmak Joanna March 2021 Care to Wager Again An Appraisal of Paul Ehrlich s Counterbet Offer to Julian Simon Part 1 Outcomes Social Science Quarterly 102 2 786 807 doi 10 1111 ssqu 12928 Desrochers Pierre Vincent Geloso Szurmak Joanna March 2021 Care to Wager Again An Appraisal of Paul Ehrlich s Counterbet Offer to Julian Simon Part 2 Critical Analysis Social Science Quarterly 102 2 808 829 doi 10 1111 ssqu 12920 Geloso Vincent March 9 2022 Statogenic climate change Julian Simon and Institutions The Review of Austrian Economics 35 343 358 SSRN 3843697 Emmett Ross B Grabowski Jesse March 2022 Better lucky than good The Simon Ehrlich bet through the lens of financial economics Ecological Economics 193 doi 10 1016 j ecolecon 2021 107322 ISSN 0921 8009 Vettese Troy September 2023 Hayek against Malthus Julian Simon s Neoliberal Critique of Environmentalism Critical Historical Studies 10 2 University of Chicago Press 283 311 doi 10 1086 726753 eISSN 2326 4470 ISSN 2326 4462 Whaples Robert M October 1 2023 Julian Simon Irreplaceable Economist Irreplaceable Man The Independent Review 28 2 271 280 Albert A Bartlett Reflections on Sustainability Population Growth and the Environment revised version Further reading editDesrochers Pierre and Vincent Geloso Snatching the Wrong Conclusions from the Jaws of Defeat A Historical Resourceship Perspective on Paul Sabin s The Bet Paul Ehrlich Julian Simon and Our Gamble over Earth s Future Yale University Press 2013 Part 2 The Wager Protagonists and Lessons New Perspectives on Political Economy vol 12 no 1 2 2016 pp 42 64 Desrochers Pierre and Vincent Geloso Snatching the Wrong Conclusions from the Jaws of Defeat A Historical Resourceship Perspective on Paul Sabin s The Bet Paul Ehrlich Julian Simon and Our Gamble over Earth s Future Yale University Press 2013 Part 1 The Missing History of Thought Depletionism vs Resourceship New Perspectives on Political Economy vol 12 no 1 2 2016 pp 5 41 Books critical of Julian Simon Ehrlich Paul R Betrayal of Science and Reason How Anti Environmental Rhetoric Threatens Our Future 1996 ISBN 1 55963 483 9 Grant Lindsey Elephants in the Volkswagen 1992 ISBN 0 7167 2268 2 Hardin Garrett The Ostrich Factor Our Population Myopia 1998 ISBN 0 19 512274 7 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Julian Simon Writings by Julian L Simon juliansimon org The Ultimate Resource II People Materials and Environment juliansimon org Julian Simon papers at the University of Maryland libraries Liberty Institute First Annual Julian L Simon Memorial Lecture Julian Simon s Bet With Paul Ehrlich Julian Simon s bet with David South Julian Simon Remembered It s A Wonderful Life FMN and Heartland Remembering Julian Simon Reason Magazine David Foreman vs the Cornucopians Appearances on C SPAN MIT Technology Review Environmental Heresies The Julian L Simon Memorial Award MercatorNet Population Julian L Simon papers at the University of Wyoming American Heritage Center Critique of The Ultimate Resource by Herman Daly 1991 Ernest Partridge Perilous Optimism 2007 gadfly igc org a criticism of Simon and Sagoff Prof Simon s ideas have been universally dismissed by environmental scientists as crackpot and yet he was something of a hero among libertarians neo classical economists and their political disciples Simon Julian L encyclopedia com Simon Julian 1932 1998 libertarianism org CVPortals nbsp Economics nbsp Libertarianism nbsp Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Julian Simon amp oldid 1216424163, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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