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Economics, 15/e
Campbell R. McConnell, University of Nebraska, Emeritus
Stanley L. Brue, Pacific Lutheran University
Chapter 35 Labor Market Issues: Unionism, Discrimination, AND Immigration
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 Origin of the Idea
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Origin of the Idea
35.1 Taste for Discrimination Model
35.1 Taste for Discrimination Model
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Gary Becker (b. 1930) developed the Taste for Discrimination model. The model
came out of his 1955 doctoral dissertation, which was revised and published
in 1957 under the title The Economics of Discrimination.
Becker was born in the small coal-mining town of Pottsville, Pennsylvania.
Because of his father’s business dealings, the family moved to Brooklyn, New
York, where Becker spent most of his childhood. After high school he enrolled
in Princeton University. In a quest for financial independence, he completed
his undergraduate degree there in economics in three years. In his final year
at Princeton Becker was beginning to lose his interest in economics because
he felt it did not address significant social issues. Fortunately he persevered,
enrolling in the graduate program at the University of Chicago. There he studied
under prominent economists such as Milton Friedman and Theodore Schultz, and
renewed his interest in the discipline.
In the 1960s Becker spent his time teaching at Columbia University and researching
for the National Bureau of Economic Research. In 1970 he returned to the University
of Chicago, where he currently serves as a professor of economics and sociology.
In 1986 he served as president of the American Economic Association, and since
the mid-1980s has contributed regularly to Business Week. In 1992 the
Bank of Sweden awarded Becker the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences "for
having extended the domain of microeconomic analysis to a wide range of human
behavior and interaction, including nonmarket behavior."(1)
In addition to his work on discrimination, Becker has written extensively on
the topics of human capital investment, time allocation, and family decision-making
in areas such as marriage, childbearing, and divorce.
- Nobel e-Museum, The
Nobel Foundation, http://www.nobel.se/economics/laureates/1992/, April 2,
2001.
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