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Gary Becker

Gary Stanley Becker (/ˈbɛkər/; December 2, 1930 – May 3, 2014) was an American economist who received the 1992 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.[1] He was a professor of economics and sociology at the University of Chicago, and was a leader of the third generation of the Chicago school of economics.[2][3]

Gary Becker
Becker in 2008
Born
Gary Stanley Becker

(1930-12-02)December 2, 1930
DiedMay 3, 2014(2014-05-03) (aged 83)
EducationPrinceton University (BA)
University of Chicago (PhD)
Academic career
InstitutionColumbia University
(1957–1968)
University of Chicago
(1968–2014)
FieldEconomics
School or
tradition
Chicago School of Economics
Doctoral
advisor
H. Gregg Lewis
Doctoral
students
David O. Meltzer
Russ Roberts
Walter Block
Shoshana Grossbard
Darius Lakdawalla
Rodrigo R. Soares
InfluencesMilton Friedman
Theodore Schultz
ContributionsA Treatise on the Family (1981)
Rotten kid theorem
AwardsJohn Bates Clark Medal (1967)
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences (1992)
Pontifical Academy of Sciences (1997)
National Medal of Science (2000)
John von Neumann Award (2004)
Presidential Medal of Freedom (2007)

Becker was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1992 and received the United States Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2007. A 2011 survey of economics professors named Becker their favorite living economist over the age of 60, followed by Kenneth Arrow and Robert Solow. Economist Justin Wolfers called him "the most important social scientist in the past 50 years."[4]

Becker was one of the first economists to analyze topics that had been researched in sociology, including racial discrimination, crime, family organization, and rational addiction. He argued that many different types of human behavior can be seen as rational and utility-maximizing, including those that are often regarded as self-destructive or irrational. His approach also extended to altruistic aspects of human behavior, which he showed to sometimes have self-serving ends (when individuals' utility is properly defined and measured, that is). He was also among the foremost exponents of the study of human capital. According to Milton Friedman, he was "the greatest social scientist who has lived and worked" in the second part of the twentieth century.[5]

Career edit

Becker was born to a Jewish family[6] in Pottsville, Pennsylvania. He received a BA from Princeton University in 1951, completing a senior thesis titled "The Theory of Multi-Country Trade".[7] He then earned a PhD from the University of Chicago in 1955 with a thesis entitled The Economics of Discrimination.[8] At Chicago, Becker was influenced by Milton Friedman, whom Becker called "by far the greatest living teacher I have ever had".[9] Becker credits Friedman's course on microeconomics for helping to renew his interest in economics. Becker also noted that during his time at Chicago, there were several other economists that greatly influenced his future work, namely Gregg Lewis, T. W. Schultz, Aaron Director, and L. J. Savage.[10] For a few years, Becker worked as an assistant professor at Chicago and conducted research there.[10] Before turning 30, he moved to teach at Columbia University in 1957 while also conducting research at the National Bureau of Economic Research. In 1970 Becker returned to the University of Chicago, and in 1983 was offered a joint appointment by the Sociology Department of Chicago.[10] In 1965 he was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association.[11]

Becker was a founding partner of TGG Group, a business and philanthropy consulting company. Becker won the John Bates Clark Medal in 1967. He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1972,[12] a member of the National Academy of Sciences in 1975,[13] and a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1986.[14] Becker was a member, and later the president of, the Mont Pelerin Society.[15] Becker received the Nobel Prize in 1992 "for having extended the domain of microeconomic analysis to a wide range of human behavior and interaction, including nonmarket behavior".[16] Becker also received the National Medal of Science in 2000.[17] Becker received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement in 2001, presented by Awards Council member and Nobel Prize laureate Leon M. Lederman.[18][19]

A political conservative,[20] he wrote a monthly column for Business Week from 1985 to 2004, alternating with liberal Princeton economist Alan Blinder. In 1996 Becker was a senior adviser to Republican presidential candidate Robert Dole.[21] In December 2004, Becker started a joint weblog with Judge Richard Posner entitled The Becker-Posner Blog.[22]

Becker's first wife was Doria Slote. They were married from 1954 until her death in 1970.[10] The marriage produced two daughters, Catherine Becker and Judy Becker.[21] About ten years later, in 1980[10] Becker married Guity Nashat, a historian of the Middle East whose research interests overlapped his own.[23]

In 2014 Becker died in Chicago, Illinois, aged 83.[24] The same year, he was honored in a three-day conference organized at the University of Chicago.[25]

Economic analysis edit

Becker's work has been influential not only in economics but also other disciplines including sociology and demography. His most famous work is Human Capital, and he wrote on sociological topics as diverse as marriage, the family, criminal behavior, and racial discrimination.[26]

Discrimination edit

Becker recognized that people (employers, customers, and employees) sometimes do not want to work with minorities because they have bias against the disadvantaged groups. He went on to say that discrimination increases a firm's cost because in discriminating against certain workers, the employer would have to pay more to other workers so that work can proceed without the biased ones. If the employer employs the minority, low wages can be provided, but more people can be employed, and productivity can be increased.[27]

Politics edit

Becker's contributions to politics have come to be known as "Chicago political economy" of which he is considered one of the founding fathers.[28]

Becker's insight was to recognize that deadweight losses put a brake on predation. He took the well-known insight that deadweight losses are proportional to the square of the tax, and used it to argue that a linear increase in takings by a predatory interest group will provoke a non-linear increase in the deadweight losses its victim suffers. These rapidly increasing losses will prod victims to invest equivalent sums in resisting attempts on their wealth. The advance of predators, fueled by linear incentives, slows before the stiffening resistance of prey outraged by non-linear damages.[29]

Crime and punishment edit

Jurist Richard Posner has stressed the enormous influence of Becker's work which "has turned out to be a fount of economic writing on crime and its control",[30] as well as the analytics of crime and punishment.[31]

While Becker acknowledged that many people operate under a high moral and ethical constraint, criminals rationally see that the benefits of their crime outweigh the cost which depends upon the probability of apprehension, conviction, and punishment, and their current set of opportunities. From a public policy perspective, since the cost of increasing a fine is trivial in comparison to the cost of increasing surveillance, one can conclude that the best policy is to maximize the fine and minimize surveillance. However, this conclusion has limits, not the least of which include ethical considerations.[32]

Human capital edit

In his 1964 book Human capital theories Becker introduced the economic concept of human capital. This book is now a classic in economy research and Becker went on to become a defining proponent of the Chicago school of economics. The book was republished in 1975 and 1993. Becker considered labor economics to be part of capital theory. He mused that "economists and plan-makers have fully agreed with the concept of investing on human beings".[33]

Modern household economics edit

Together, Becker and Jacob Mincer founded Modern Household Economics, sometimes called the New Home Economics (NHE), in the 1960s at the labor workshop at Columbia University that they both directed. Shoshana Grossbard, who was a student of Becker at the University of Chicago, first published a history of the NHE at Columbia and Chicago in 2001.[34] After receiving feedback from the NHE founders she revised her account.[35]

Among the first publications in Modern Household Economics were Becker (1960) on fertility,[36] Mincer (1962) on women's labor supply,[37] and Becker (1965) on the allocation of time.[38][39] Students and faculty who attended the Becker-Mincer workshop at Columbia in the 1960s and have published in the NHE tradition include Andrea Beller, Barry Chiswick, Carmel Chiswick, Victor Fuchs, Michael Grossman, Robert Michael, June E. O'Neill, Sol Polachek, and Robert Willis. James Heckman was also influenced by the NHE tradition and attended the labor workshop at Columbia from 1969 until his move to the University of Chicago. The NHE may be seen as a subfield of family economics.[40][41]

In 2013, responding to a lack of women in top positions in the United States, Becker told the Wall Street Journal reporter David Wessel, "A lot of barriers [to women and blacks] have been broken down. That's all for the good. It's much less clear what we see today is the result of such artificial barriers. Going home to take care of the kids when the man doesn't: Is that a waste of a woman's time? There's no evidence that it is." This view was criticized by Charles Jones, stating that, "Productivity could be 9 percent to 15 percent higher, potentially, if all barriers were eliminated."[42]

Home production edit

In the mid-1960s Becker and Kelvin Lancaster developed the economic concept of a household production function. Both assumed that consumers in a household receive utility from the goods they purchase. Such as for example, when consumers purchase raw food. If it is cooked, a utility arises from the meal. In 1981 Becker published Treatise on the Family, where he stressed the importance of division of labor and gains from specification.[43]

Economics of the family edit

During Becker's time at Chicago in the 1970s, he mostly focused on the family. He had previously done work on birth rates and family size, and he used this time to expand his understanding of how economics works within a family.[10] Some specific family issues covered during this time were marriage, divorce, altruism toward other members of the family, investments by parents in their children, and long-term changes in what families do. All of Becker's research on the family resulted in A Treatise on the Family (1981). Throughout the decade, he contributed new ideas and information, and in 1991 an expanded edition of the work was published. His research applies basic economic assumptions such as maximizing behavior, preferences, and equilibrium to the family. He analyzed determinants for marriage and divorce, family size, parents' allocation of time to their children, and changes in wealth over several generations. This publication was an extensive overview of the economics of the family and helped to unite economics with other fields like sociology and anthropology.[44]

Rotten kid theorem edit

At the core of Becker's economic theory on the family, which he developed on the basis of figures for United States families in 1981, is the rotten kid theorem. He applied the economics of an altruist to a family, wherein a person takes actions that improve the well-being of another person, despite more self-interested action being feasible. Becker pointed out that a parent foregoes higher income, by focusing on family work commitments in order to maximize a well-meaning objective. Becker also theorized that a child in a US family may be perfectly selfish because it maximizes its own utility. There have been attempts to test this economic thesis, in the course of which it was found that cross-generational families do not necessarily maximize their joint income.[45]

Organ markets edit

A 2007 article by Gary Becker and Julio Jorge Elias entitled "Introducing Incentives in the market for live and cadaveric organ donations"[46] posited that a free market could help solve the problem of a scarcity in organ transplants. Their economic modeling was able to estimate the price tag for human kidneys (about US$15,000) and human livers (about US$32,000). It is argued by critics that this particular market would exploit the underprivileged donors from the developing world.[47]

Selected publications edit

  • Gary Becker (1993) [1964]. Human capital: a theoretical and empirical analysis, with special reference to education (3rd ed.). Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226041209.
  • Gary Becker (September 1965). "A theory of the allocation of time". The Economic Journal. 75 (299): 493–517. doi:10.2307/2228949. JSTOR 2228949.
  • Gary Becker (December 1966). "Una teoría de la distribución del tiempo". Estudios Económicos. 5 (9/10): 71–112. doi:10.52292/j.estudecon.1966.1032. S2CID 245198057.
  • Gary Becker (1968), "Discrimination, economic", in Sills, David L. (ed.), International Encyclopedia of Social Sciences, Vol. 4 Cumu to Elas, New York, New York: Macmillan, pp. 208–210
  • Gary Becker (March 1968). "Crime and punishment: an economic approach". Journal of Political Economy. 76 (2): 169–217. doi:10.1086/259394.[permanent dead link]
  • Gary Becker (1969), "An economic analysis of fertility", in National Bureau of Economic Research (ed.), Demographic and economic change in developed countries, a conference of the universities, New York: Columbia University Press, pp. 209–240, ISBN 9780870143021
  • Gary Becker (1971). The economics of discrimination. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226041049.
  • Gary Becker (1971) [1957]. The economics of discrimination. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226041155.
  • Gary Becker; H. Gregg Lewis (March 1973). "On the interaction between the quantity and quality of children" (PDF). Journal of Political Economy. 81 (2): 279–288. doi:10.1086/260166. S2CID 152624744.
  • Gary Becker (July 1973). "A theory of marriage: part I". Journal of Political Economy. 81 (4): 813–846. doi:10.1086/260084. S2CID 152514496.
  • Gary Becker (1974). Essays in the economics of crime and punishment. New York: National Bureau of Economic Research distributed by Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780870142635.
  • Gary Becker (March 1974). "A theory of marriage: part II". Journal of Political Economy. 82 (2): 11–26. doi:10.1086/260287. S2CID 222442284.
  • Gary Becker (November 1974). "A theory of social interactions" (PDF). Journal of Political Economy. 82 (6): 1063–1093. doi:10.1086/260265. S2CID 145041880.
  • Gary Becker; Gilbert Ghez (1975). The allocation of time and goods over the life cycle. New York: National Bureau of Economic Research Distributed by Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780870145148.
  • Gary Becker (1976), "Pride and prejudice", in Becker, Gary S. (ed.), The economic approach to human behavior, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 15–17, ISBN 9780226041124
  • Gary Becker; George J. Stigler (March 1977). "De gustibus non est disputandum". The American Economic Review. 67 (2): 76–90.
  • Gary Becker; Elizabeth Landes; Robert T. Michael (December 1977). "An economic analysis of marital instability". Journal of Political Economy. 85 (6): 1147–1187. doi:10.1086/260631. JSTOR 1837421. S2CID 53494363.
  • Gary Becker (1991) [1981]. A treatise on the family. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674906983.
  • Gary Becker (August 1983). "A theory of competition among pressure groups for political influence". Quarterly Journal of Economics. 98 (3): 371–400. doi:10.2307/1886017. JSTOR 1886017.
  • Gary Becker (January 1985). "Human capital, effort, and the sexual division of labor". Journal of Labor Economics. 3 (1): 33–58.
  • Gary Becker; Kevin M. Murphy (August 1988). "A theory of rational addiction". Journal of Political Economy. 96 (4): 675–700. doi:10.1086/261558. hdl:10419/262443. S2CID 6421803.
  • Gary Becker (December 9, 1992). "Nobel prize lecture: the economic way of looking at life". nobelprize.org. Nobel Media AB.
  • Gary Becker (1996). Accounting for tastes. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674543560.
  • Gary Becker; Guity Nashat Becker (1997). The economics of life: from baseball to affirmative action to immigration, how real-world issues affect our everyday life. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 9780070067097.
  • Gary Becker; Kevin M. Murphy (2000). Social economics market behavior in a social environment. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674011212.
  • Gary Becker; Julio Jorge Elías (May 2007). "Introducing incentives in the market for live and cadaveric organ donations". Journal of Economic Perspectives. 21 (3): 3–24. doi:10.1257/jep.21.3.3. PMID 19728419.
  • Gary Becker (2012), "When illegals stop crossing the border", in Miniter, Brendan (ed.), The 4% solution unleashing the economic growth America needs, New York: Crown Business, ISBN 9780307986153

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1992". NobelPrize.org. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  2. ^ "Our Legacy". BFI. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  3. ^ "The Fourth Generation in Chicago". Economic Principals. November 16, 2014. Retrieved September 3, 2019.
  4. ^ Justin Wolfers. "How Gary Becker Transformed the Social Sciences" New York Times May 5, 2014
  5. ^ Catherine Rampell. "Gary Becker, an economist who changed economics"Washington Post May 5, 2014
  6. ^ "Gary Becker (1930–2014)". jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved March 29, 2015.
  7. ^ Becker, Gary Stanley. The Theory of Multi-Country Trade (Thesis).
  8. ^ Gary Becker (1971). The Economics of Discrimination. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226041049.
  9. ^ Daniel B. Klein; Ryan Daza (September 2013). "Ideological profiles of the economics laureates: Gary S. Becker". Econ Journal Watch. 100 (3): 285–291.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Gary Becker (May 3, 2014). "Gary S. Becker – Biographical". Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on June 16, 2016. Retrieved August 20, 2016.
  12. ^ "Book of Members, 1780–2010: Chapter B" (PDF). American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
  13. ^ "Gary S. Becker". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved May 12, 2022.
  14. ^ "APS Member History". search.amphilsoc.org. Retrieved May 12, 2022.
  15. ^ (PDF). DeSmogBlog. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 23, 2015. Retrieved September 10, 2014.
  16. ^ Staff writer (June 6, 2006). "Gary S. Becker – Facts". nobelprize.org. Nobel Media AB.
  17. ^ . University of Chicago. Archived from the original on April 16, 2014. Retrieved December 11, 2004.
  18. ^ "Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement". www.achievement.org. American Academy of Achievement.
  19. ^ "Jeffrey P. Bezos Biography Photo". 2001. Seated from left to right: Prime Minister of Israel Ehud Barak, nautical archaeologist Dr. George Bass, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economics Gary S. Becker, CEO of Hearst Corporation Frank A. Bennack, Jr., CEO of Amazon Jeff Bezos, and director of the National Gallery of Art J. Carter Brown at the honoree reception prior to the Banquet of the Golden Plate ceremonies during the American Academy of Achievement's 2001 Summit held in San Antonio.
  20. ^ Steven M. Teles (2008), The rise of the conservative legal movement: the battle for control of the law, Princeton University Press, p. 98, ISBN 9781400829699
  21. ^ a b Robert D. Hershey Jr. (May 4, 2014). "Gary S. Becker, 83, Nobel Winner Who Applied Economics to Everyday Life, Dies". The New York Times.
  22. ^ "The Becker-Posner Blog". University of Chicago Law School.
  23. ^ . University of Chicago. Archived from the original on October 13, 2014. Retrieved July 15, 2007.
  24. ^ William Harms (May 4, 2014). "Gary S. Becker, Nobel-winning scholar of economics and sociology, 1930–2014". University of Chicago.
  25. ^ Palda, Filip (November 4, 2014). "A school in decline: In Chicago, economists honour Gary Becker". Financial Post.
  26. ^ Nelson, Robert H. (2001). Economics as Religion. Pennsylvania State University Press. p. 194.
  27. ^ . Open University. October 7, 2013. Archived from the original on October 7, 2013. Retrieved January 28, 2016.
  28. ^ Filip Palda (2016) A Better Kind of Violence, Chicago Political Economy, Public Choice, and the Quest for an Ultimate Theory of Power, Cooper-Wolfling Press
  29. ^ Gary Becker (August 1983). "A theory of competition among pressure groups for political influence". Quarterly Journal of Economics. 98 (3): 371–400. doi:10.2307/1886017. JSTOR 1886017.
  30. ^ Richard A. Posner (2004). Frontiers of legal theory. Harvard University Press. p. 52. ISBN 9780674013605.
  31. ^ Bernard Harcourt, ed. (2011), The illusion of free markets: punishment and the myth of natural order, Harvard University Press, pp. 133–134, ISBN 9780674057265
  32. ^ Gary Becker (1974), "Crime and punishment: an economic approach", Essays in the economics of crime and punishment, New York: National Bureau of Economic Research distributed by Columbia University Press, pp. 1–54, ISBN 9780870142635
  33. ^ Min Zhu (2012). Business, Economics, Financial Sciences, and Management. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 436. ISBN 9783642279669.
  34. ^ Grossbard-Shechtman Shoshana (2001). "The New Home Economics at Columbia and Chicago". Feminist Economics. 7 (3): 103–130. doi:10.1080/13545700110111136. S2CID 153814425.
  35. ^ Shoshana Grossbard (2006) “The New Home Economics at Columbia and Chicago” in Jacob Mincer: A Pioneer of Modern Labor Economics, edited by S Grossbard, Springer
  36. ^ Becker, Gary S. 1960. "An Economic Analysis of Fertility." In National Bureau Committee for Economic Research, Demographic and Economic Change in Developed Countries, a Conference of the Universities. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press
  37. ^ Jacob Mincer (1962). "Labor Force Participation of Married Women: a Study of Labor Supply". In H. Gregg Lewis (ed.). Aspects of Labor Economics. Princeton University Press.
  38. ^ Gary Becker (1965). "A Theory of the Allocation of Time". The Economic Journal. 75 (299): 493–517. doi:10.2307/2228949. JSTOR 2228949.
  39. ^ Jan De Vries (2008) The industrious revolution: consumer behavior and the household economy, Cambridge, p. 26[ISBN missing]
  40. ^ Berk Richard A., Fenstermaker Berk Sarah (1983). "Supply-side sociology of the family: The challenge of the new home economics". Annual Review of Sociology. 9 (1): 375–395. doi:10.1146/annurev.so.09.080183.002111.
  41. ^ Grossbard-Shechtman Shoshana (2001). "The new home economics at Colombia and Chicago". Feminist Economics. 7 (3): 103–130. doi:10.1080/13545700110111136. S2CID 153814425.
  42. ^ David Wessel (April 3, 2013). "The Economics of Leaning In". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved April 4, 2013.
  43. ^ Wei Zhang (2006). Economic Growth with Income and Wealth Distribution. Springer. p. 71. ISBN 9780230506336.
  44. ^ Becker, Gary S. ([1981] 1991). A Treatise on the Family, Enl. edition. Description and preview. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674906985.
  45. ^ Herbert Gintis (2000). Game Theory Evolving: A Problem-centered Introduction to Modeling Strategic Behavior. Princeton University Press. pp. 34–35. ISBN 9780691009438.
  46. ^ Gary Becker; Julio Jorge Elías (Summer 2007). "Introducing incentives in the market for live and cadaveric organ donations". Journal of Economic Perspectives. 21 (3): 3–24. doi:10.1257/jep.21.3.3. PMID 19728419.
  47. ^ Vivekanand Jha & Kirpal S. Chugh (September 2006). "The case against a regulated system of living kidney sales". Nature Clinical Practice Nephrology. 2 (9): 466–467. doi:10.1038/ncpneph0268. PMID 16941033. S2CID 9253108.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Gary Becker on Nobelprize.org  
  • Works by or about Gary Becker at Internet Archive

gary, becker, gary, stanley, becker, december, 1930, 2014, american, economist, received, 1992, nobel, memorial, prize, economic, sciences, professor, economics, sociology, university, chicago, leader, third, generation, chicago, school, economics, becker, 200. Gary Stanley Becker ˈ b ɛ k er December 2 1930 May 3 2014 was an American economist who received the 1992 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences 1 He was a professor of economics and sociology at the University of Chicago and was a leader of the third generation of the Chicago school of economics 2 3 Gary BeckerBecker in 2008BornGary Stanley Becker 1930 12 02 December 2 1930Pottsville Pennsylvania U S DiedMay 3 2014 2014 05 03 aged 83 Chicago Illinois U S EducationPrinceton University BA University of Chicago PhD Academic careerInstitutionColumbia University 1957 1968 University of Chicago 1968 2014 FieldEconomicsSchool ortraditionChicago School of EconomicsDoctoraladvisorH Gregg LewisDoctoralstudentsDavid O MeltzerRuss RobertsWalter BlockShoshana GrossbardDarius LakdawallaRodrigo R SoaresInfluencesMilton FriedmanTheodore SchultzContributionsA Treatise on the Family 1981 Rotten kid theoremAwardsJohn Bates Clark Medal 1967 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences 1992 Pontifical Academy of Sciences 1997 National Medal of Science 2000 John von Neumann Award 2004 Presidential Medal of Freedom 2007 Becker was awarded the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1992 and received the United States Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2007 A 2011 survey of economics professors named Becker their favorite living economist over the age of 60 followed by Kenneth Arrow and Robert Solow Economist Justin Wolfers called him the most important social scientist in the past 50 years 4 Becker was one of the first economists to analyze topics that had been researched in sociology including racial discrimination crime family organization and rational addiction He argued that many different types of human behavior can be seen as rational and utility maximizing including those that are often regarded as self destructive or irrational His approach also extended to altruistic aspects of human behavior which he showed to sometimes have self serving ends when individuals utility is properly defined and measured that is He was also among the foremost exponents of the study of human capital According to Milton Friedman he was the greatest social scientist who has lived and worked in the second part of the twentieth century 5 Contents 1 Career 2 Economic analysis 2 1 Discrimination 2 2 Politics 2 3 Crime and punishment 2 4 Human capital 2 5 Modern household economics 2 6 Home production 2 7 Economics of the family 2 8 Rotten kid theorem 2 9 Organ markets 3 Selected publications 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksCareer editBecker was born to a Jewish family 6 in Pottsville Pennsylvania He received a BA from Princeton University in 1951 completing a senior thesis titled The Theory of Multi Country Trade 7 He then earned a PhD from the University of Chicago in 1955 with a thesis entitled The Economics of Discrimination 8 At Chicago Becker was influenced by Milton Friedman whom Becker called by far the greatest living teacher I have ever had 9 Becker credits Friedman s course on microeconomics for helping to renew his interest in economics Becker also noted that during his time at Chicago there were several other economists that greatly influenced his future work namely Gregg Lewis T W Schultz Aaron Director and L J Savage 10 For a few years Becker worked as an assistant professor at Chicago and conducted research there 10 Before turning 30 he moved to teach at Columbia University in 1957 while also conducting research at the National Bureau of Economic Research In 1970 Becker returned to the University of Chicago and in 1983 was offered a joint appointment by the Sociology Department of Chicago 10 In 1965 he was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association 11 Becker was a founding partner of TGG Group a business and philanthropy consulting company Becker won the John Bates Clark Medal in 1967 He was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1972 12 a member of the National Academy of Sciences in 1975 13 and a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1986 14 Becker was a member and later the president of the Mont Pelerin Society 15 Becker received the Nobel Prize in 1992 for having extended the domain of microeconomic analysis to a wide range of human behavior and interaction including nonmarket behavior 16 Becker also received the National Medal of Science in 2000 17 Becker received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement in 2001 presented by Awards Council member and Nobel Prize laureate Leon M Lederman 18 19 A political conservative 20 he wrote a monthly column for Business Week from 1985 to 2004 alternating with liberal Princeton economist Alan Blinder In 1996 Becker was a senior adviser to Republican presidential candidate Robert Dole 21 In December 2004 Becker started a joint weblog with Judge Richard Posner entitled The Becker Posner Blog 22 Becker s first wife was Doria Slote They were married from 1954 until her death in 1970 10 The marriage produced two daughters Catherine Becker and Judy Becker 21 About ten years later in 1980 10 Becker married Guity Nashat a historian of the Middle East whose research interests overlapped his own 23 In 2014 Becker died in Chicago Illinois aged 83 24 The same year he was honored in a three day conference organized at the University of Chicago 25 Economic analysis editBecker s work has been influential not only in economics but also other disciplines including sociology and demography His most famous work is Human Capital and he wrote on sociological topics as diverse as marriage the family criminal behavior and racial discrimination 26 Discrimination edit Becker recognized that people employers customers and employees sometimes do not want to work with minorities because they have bias against the disadvantaged groups He went on to say that discrimination increases a firm s cost because in discriminating against certain workers the employer would have to pay more to other workers so that work can proceed without the biased ones If the employer employs the minority low wages can be provided but more people can be employed and productivity can be increased 27 Politics edit Becker s contributions to politics have come to be known as Chicago political economy of which he is considered one of the founding fathers 28 Becker s insight was to recognize that deadweight losses put a brake on predation He took the well known insight that deadweight losses are proportional to the square of the tax and used it to argue that a linear increase in takings by a predatory interest group will provoke a non linear increase in the deadweight losses its victim suffers These rapidly increasing losses will prod victims to invest equivalent sums in resisting attempts on their wealth The advance of predators fueled by linear incentives slows before the stiffening resistance of prey outraged by non linear damages 29 Crime and punishment edit Jurist Richard Posner has stressed the enormous influence of Becker s work which has turned out to be a fount of economic writing on crime and its control 30 as well as the analytics of crime and punishment 31 While Becker acknowledged that many people operate under a high moral and ethical constraint criminals rationally see that the benefits of their crime outweigh the cost which depends upon the probability of apprehension conviction and punishment and their current set of opportunities From a public policy perspective since the cost of increasing a fine is trivial in comparison to the cost of increasing surveillance one can conclude that the best policy is to maximize the fine and minimize surveillance However this conclusion has limits not the least of which include ethical considerations 32 Human capital edit In his 1964 book Human capital theories Becker introduced the economic concept of human capital This book is now a classic in economy research and Becker went on to become a defining proponent of the Chicago school of economics The book was republished in 1975 and 1993 Becker considered labor economics to be part of capital theory He mused that economists and plan makers have fully agreed with the concept of investing on human beings 33 Modern household economics edit Together Becker and Jacob Mincer founded Modern Household Economics sometimes called the New Home Economics NHE in the 1960s at the labor workshop at Columbia University that they both directed Shoshana Grossbard who was a student of Becker at the University of Chicago first published a history of the NHE at Columbia and Chicago in 2001 34 After receiving feedback from the NHE founders she revised her account 35 Among the first publications in Modern Household Economics were Becker 1960 on fertility 36 Mincer 1962 on women s labor supply 37 and Becker 1965 on the allocation of time 38 39 Students and faculty who attended the Becker Mincer workshop at Columbia in the 1960s and have published in the NHE tradition include Andrea Beller Barry Chiswick Carmel Chiswick Victor Fuchs Michael Grossman Robert Michael June E O Neill Sol Polachek and Robert Willis James Heckman was also influenced by the NHE tradition and attended the labor workshop at Columbia from 1969 until his move to the University of Chicago The NHE may be seen as a subfield of family economics 40 41 In 2013 responding to a lack of women in top positions in the United States Becker told the Wall Street Journal reporter David Wessel A lot of barriers to women and blacks have been broken down That s all for the good It s much less clear what we see today is the result of such artificial barriers Going home to take care of the kids when the man doesn t Is that a waste of a woman s time There s no evidence that it is This view was criticized by Charles Jones stating that Productivity could be 9 percent to 15 percent higher potentially if all barriers were eliminated 42 Home production edit In the mid 1960s Becker and Kelvin Lancaster developed the economic concept of a household production function Both assumed that consumers in a household receive utility from the goods they purchase Such as for example when consumers purchase raw food If it is cooked a utility arises from the meal In 1981 Becker published Treatise on the Family where he stressed the importance of division of labor and gains from specification 43 Economics of the family edit During Becker s time at Chicago in the 1970s he mostly focused on the family He had previously done work on birth rates and family size and he used this time to expand his understanding of how economics works within a family 10 Some specific family issues covered during this time were marriage divorce altruism toward other members of the family investments by parents in their children and long term changes in what families do All of Becker s research on the family resulted in A Treatise on the Family 1981 Throughout the decade he contributed new ideas and information and in 1991 an expanded edition of the work was published His research applies basic economic assumptions such as maximizing behavior preferences and equilibrium to the family He analyzed determinants for marriage and divorce family size parents allocation of time to their children and changes in wealth over several generations This publication was an extensive overview of the economics of the family and helped to unite economics with other fields like sociology and anthropology 44 Rotten kid theorem edit At the core of Becker s economic theory on the family which he developed on the basis of figures for United States families in 1981 is the rotten kid theorem He applied the economics of an altruist to a family wherein a person takes actions that improve the well being of another person despite more self interested action being feasible Becker pointed out that a parent foregoes higher income by focusing on family work commitments in order to maximize a well meaning objective Becker also theorized that a child in a US family may be perfectly selfish because it maximizes its own utility There have been attempts to test this economic thesis in the course of which it was found that cross generational families do not necessarily maximize their joint income 45 Organ markets edit A 2007 article by Gary Becker and Julio Jorge Elias entitled Introducing Incentives in the market for live and cadaveric organ donations 46 posited that a free market could help solve the problem of a scarcity in organ transplants Their economic modeling was able to estimate the price tag for human kidneys about US 15 000 and human livers about US 32 000 It is argued by critics that this particular market would exploit the underprivileged donors from the developing world 47 Selected publications editGary Becker 1993 1964 Human capital a theoretical and empirical analysis with special reference to education 3rd ed Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226041209 Gary Becker September 1965 A theory of the allocation of time The Economic Journal 75 299 493 517 doi 10 2307 2228949 JSTOR 2228949 Gary Becker December 1966 Una teoria de la distribucion del tiempo Estudios Economicos 5 9 10 71 112 doi 10 52292 j estudecon 1966 1032 S2CID 245198057 Gary Becker 1968 Discrimination economic in Sills David L ed International Encyclopedia of Social Sciences Vol 4 Cumu to Elas New York New York Macmillan pp 208 210 Gary Becker March 1968 Crime and punishment an economic approach Journal of Political Economy 76 2 169 217 doi 10 1086 259394 permanent dead link Gary Becker 1969 An economic analysis of fertility in National Bureau of Economic Research ed Demographic and economic change in developed countries a conference of the universities New York Columbia University Press pp 209 240 ISBN 9780870143021 Gary Becker 1971 The economics of discrimination Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226041049 Gary Becker 1971 1957 The economics of discrimination Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226041155 Gary Becker H Gregg Lewis March 1973 On the interaction between the quantity and quality of children PDF Journal of Political Economy 81 2 279 288 doi 10 1086 260166 S2CID 152624744 Gary Becker July 1973 A theory of marriage part I Journal of Political Economy 81 4 813 846 doi 10 1086 260084 S2CID 152514496 Gary Becker 1974 Essays in the economics of crime and punishment New York National Bureau of Economic Research distributed by Columbia University Press ISBN 9780870142635 Gary Becker March 1974 A theory of marriage part II Journal of Political Economy 82 2 11 26 doi 10 1086 260287 S2CID 222442284 Gary Becker November 1974 A theory of social interactions PDF Journal of Political Economy 82 6 1063 1093 doi 10 1086 260265 S2CID 145041880 Gary Becker Gilbert Ghez 1975 The allocation of time and goods over the life cycle New York National Bureau of Economic Research Distributed by Columbia University Press ISBN 9780870145148 Gary Becker 1976 Pride and prejudice in Becker Gary S ed The economic approach to human behavior Chicago University of Chicago Press pp 15 17 ISBN 9780226041124 Gary Becker George J Stigler March 1977 De gustibus non est disputandum The American Economic Review 67 2 76 90 Gary Becker Elizabeth Landes Robert T Michael December 1977 An economic analysis of marital instability Journal of Political Economy 85 6 1147 1187 doi 10 1086 260631 JSTOR 1837421 S2CID 53494363 Gary Becker 1991 1981 A treatise on the family Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674906983 Gary Becker August 1983 A theory of competition among pressure groups for political influence Quarterly Journal of Economics 98 3 371 400 doi 10 2307 1886017 JSTOR 1886017 Gary Becker January 1985 Human capital effort and the sexual division of labor Journal of Labor Economics 3 1 33 58 Gary Becker Kevin M Murphy August 1988 A theory of rational addiction Journal of Political Economy 96 4 675 700 doi 10 1086 261558 hdl 10419 262443 S2CID 6421803 Gary Becker December 9 1992 Nobel prize lecture the economic way of looking at life nobelprize org Nobel Media AB Gary Becker 1996 Accounting for tastes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674543560 Gary Becker Guity Nashat Becker 1997 The economics of life from baseball to affirmative action to immigration how real world issues affect our everyday life McGraw Hill ISBN 9780070067097 Gary Becker Kevin M Murphy 2000 Social economics market behavior in a social environment Belknap Press of Harvard University Press ISBN 9780674011212 Gary Becker Julio Jorge Elias May 2007 Introducing incentives in the market for live and cadaveric organ donations Journal of Economic Perspectives 21 3 3 24 doi 10 1257 jep 21 3 3 PMID 19728419 Gary Becker 2012 When illegals stop crossing the border in Miniter Brendan ed The 4 solution unleashing the economic growth America needs New York Crown Business ISBN 9780307986153See also editSocial capital List of Jewish Nobel laureatesReferences edit The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel 1992 NobelPrize org Retrieved September 3 2019 Our Legacy BFI Retrieved September 3 2019 The Fourth Generation in Chicago Economic Principals November 16 2014 Retrieved September 3 2019 Justin Wolfers How Gary Becker Transformed the Social Sciences New York Times May 5 2014 Catherine Rampell Gary Becker an economist who changed economics Washington Post May 5 2014 Gary Becker 1930 2014 jewishvirtuallibrary org Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved March 29 2015 Becker Gary Stanley The Theory of Multi Country Trade Thesis Gary Becker 1971 The Economics of Discrimination University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226041049 Daniel B Klein Ryan Daza September 2013 Ideological profiles of the economics laureates Gary S Becker Econ Journal Watch 100 3 285 291 a b c d e f Gary Becker May 3 2014 Gary S Becker Biographical Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences View Search Fellows of the ASA Archived from the original on June 16 2016 Retrieved August 20 2016 Book of Members 1780 2010 Chapter B PDF American Academy of Arts and Sciences Gary S Becker www nasonline org Retrieved May 12 2022 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved May 12 2022 Mont Pelerin Society Directory PDF DeSmogBlog Archived from the original PDF on September 23 2015 Retrieved September 10 2014 Staff writer June 6 2006 Gary S Becker Facts nobelprize org Nobel Media AB Home page University of Chicago Archived from the original on April 16 2014 Retrieved December 11 2004 Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement www achievement org American Academy of Achievement Jeffrey P Bezos Biography Photo 2001 Seated from left to right Prime Minister of Israel Ehud Barak nautical archaeologist Dr George Bass recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economics Gary S Becker CEO of Hearst Corporation Frank A Bennack Jr CEO of Amazon Jeff Bezos and director of the National Gallery of Art J Carter Brown at the honoree reception prior to the Banquet of the Golden Plate ceremonies during the American Academy of Achievement s 2001 Summit held in San Antonio Steven M Teles 2008 The rise of the conservative legal movement the battle for control of the law Princeton University Press p 98 ISBN 9781400829699 a b Robert D Hershey Jr May 4 2014 Gary S Becker 83 Nobel Winner Who Applied Economics to Everyday Life Dies The New York Times The Becker Posner Blog University of Chicago Law School Gary S Becker profile University of Chicago Archived from the original on October 13 2014 Retrieved July 15 2007 William Harms May 4 2014 Gary S Becker Nobel winning scholar of economics and sociology 1930 2014 University of Chicago Palda Filip November 4 2014 A school in decline In Chicago economists honour Gary Becker Financial Post Nelson Robert H 2001 Economics as Religion Pennsylvania State University Press p 194 Economics explains how discrimination can persist in the labor market Open University October 7 2013 Archived from the original on October 7 2013 Retrieved January 28 2016 Filip Palda 2016 A Better Kind of Violence Chicago Political Economy Public Choice and the Quest for an Ultimate Theory of Power Cooper Wolfling Press Gary Becker August 1983 A theory of competition among pressure groups for political influence Quarterly Journal of Economics 98 3 371 400 doi 10 2307 1886017 JSTOR 1886017 Richard A Posner 2004 Frontiers of legal theory Harvard University Press p 52 ISBN 9780674013605 Bernard Harcourt ed 2011 The illusion of free markets punishment and the myth of natural order Harvard University Press pp 133 134 ISBN 9780674057265 Gary Becker 1974 Crime and punishment an economic approach Essays in the economics of crime and punishment New York National Bureau of Economic Research distributed by Columbia University Press pp 1 54 ISBN 9780870142635 Min Zhu 2012 Business Economics Financial Sciences and Management Springer Science amp Business Media p 436 ISBN 9783642279669 Grossbard Shechtman Shoshana 2001 The New Home Economics at Columbia and Chicago Feminist Economics 7 3 103 130 doi 10 1080 13545700110111136 S2CID 153814425 Shoshana Grossbard 2006 The New Home Economics at Columbia and Chicago in Jacob Mincer A Pioneer of Modern Labor Economics edited by S Grossbard Springer Becker Gary S 1960 An Economic Analysis of Fertility In National Bureau Committee for Economic Research Demographic and Economic Change in Developed Countries a Conference of the Universities Princeton N J Princeton University Press Jacob Mincer 1962 Labor Force Participation of Married Women a Study of Labor Supply In H Gregg Lewis ed Aspects of Labor Economics Princeton University Press Gary Becker 1965 A Theory of the Allocation of Time The Economic Journal 75 299 493 517 doi 10 2307 2228949 JSTOR 2228949 Jan De Vries 2008 The industrious revolution consumer behavior and the household economy Cambridge p 26 ISBN missing Berk Richard A Fenstermaker Berk Sarah 1983 Supply side sociology of the family The challenge of the new home economics Annual Review of Sociology 9 1 375 395 doi 10 1146 annurev so 09 080183 002111 Grossbard Shechtman Shoshana 2001 The new home economics at Colombia and Chicago Feminist Economics 7 3 103 130 doi 10 1080 13545700110111136 S2CID 153814425 David Wessel April 3 2013 The Economics of Leaning In The Wall Street Journal Retrieved April 4 2013 Wei Zhang 2006 Economic Growth with Income and Wealth Distribution Springer p 71 ISBN 9780230506336 Becker Gary S 1981 1991 A Treatise on the Family Enl edition Description and preview Harvard University Press ISBN 0674906985 Herbert Gintis 2000 Game Theory Evolving A Problem centered Introduction to Modeling Strategic Behavior Princeton University Press pp 34 35 ISBN 9780691009438 Gary Becker Julio Jorge Elias Summer 2007 Introducing incentives in the market for live and cadaveric organ donations Journal of Economic Perspectives 21 3 3 24 doi 10 1257 jep 21 3 3 PMID 19728419 Vivekanand Jha amp Kirpal S Chugh September 2006 The case against a regulated system of living kidney sales Nature Clinical Practice Nephrology 2 9 466 467 doi 10 1038 ncpneph0268 PMID 16941033 S2CID 9253108 Further reading editSteelman Aaron 2008 Becker Gary 1930 In Hamowy Ronald ed The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks CA Sage Cato Institute pp 28 30 ISBN 9781412965804 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gary Becker Gary Becker on Nobelprize org nbsp Works by or about Gary Becker at Internet ArchiveAwardsPreceded byRonald H Coase Laureate of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics1992 Succeeded byRobert W FogelDouglass C NorthPortals nbsp Economics nbsp Libertarianism nbsp Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gary Becker amp oldid 1200022524, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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