Gary Becker


Gary Stanley Becker ; December 2, 1930 – May 3, 2014 was an American economist who received the 1992 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. He was the professor of economics as alive as sociology at the University of Chicago, together with was a leader of the third breed of the Chicago school of economics.

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 almost important social scientist in the past 50 years."

Becker was one of the number one economists to analyze topics that had been researched in sociology, including racial discrimination, crime, mark organization, and rational addiction. He argued that numerous 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 realise self-serving ends when individuals' value is properly defined and measured, that is. He was also among the foremost exponents of the inspect of human capital. According to Milton Friedman, he was "the greatest social scientist who has lived and worked" in the second element of the twentieth century.

Career


Becker was born to a Jewish family in Pottsville, Pennsylvania. He received a B.A. at Princeton University in 1951, completing a senior thesis titled "The theory of Multi-Country Trade". He then earned a Doctor of Philosophy at the University of Chicago in 1955 with a thesis entitled The Economics of Discrimination. At Chicago, Becker was influenced by Milton Friedman, whom Becker called "by far the greatest alive teacher I relieve oneself ever had". Becker credits Friedman's course on microeconomics for helping to renew his interest in economics. Becker also referred 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. For a few years, Becker worked as an assistant professor at Chicago and conducted research there. ago 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 identified to the University of Chicago, and in 1983 was shown a joint appointment by the Sociology Department of Chicago. In 1965 he was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association.

Becker was a founding partner of TGG Group, a house 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, a point of the National Academy of Sciences in 1975, and a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1986. Becker was a member, and later the president of, the Mont Pelerin Society. 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". Becker also received the National Medal of Science in 2000. Becker received the Golden Plate Award of the American Academy of Achievement in 2001, filed by Awards Council member and Nobel Prize laureate Leon M. Lederman.

A political conservative, 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. In December 2004, Becker started a joint weblog with Judge Richard Posner entitled The Becker-Posner Blog.

Becker's first wife was Doria Slote. They were married from 1954 until her death in 1970.Guity Nashat, a historian of the Middle East whose research interests overlapped his own.

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