Gary Stanley Becker was born in 1930 in Pottsville. He
studied economics at Princeton University and the University of Chicago,
where he received his Ph.D. degree in 1955. His doctoral dissertation,
written under the supervision of Milton Friedman, became the book The
Economics of Discrimination published in 1957, with a second edition in 1971.
The work starts by asking how much people are willing to give
up to avoid interaction with others, with the implication that public policy
can discourage discrimination by raising the price of it.
In 1992, Mr. Becker received the Nobel Prize for Economics for
"having extended the domain of economic theory to disciplines such as sociology,
demography and criminology" and for showing that rational economic incentives
influence decision making in "areas where researchers formerly assumed
that behaviour is habitual and often downright irrational".
Mr. Becker is the author of numerous books and was awarded several
international prizes. Among many other positions, he has been President
and Vice-President of the American Economic Association and is an associate
member of the Institute of Fiscal and Monetary Policy of the Ministry of
Finance in Japan. He has also been writing a column for Business Week
since 1985. Mr. Becker is currently Professor of Economics and Sociology
at the University of Chicago.
This text excerpted from 10
Nobels for the Future.