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Jacob Mincer A Pioneer of Modern Labor Economics

Contributor(s): Grossbard, Shoshana [editor.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2006.Description: XII, 198 p. 39 illus. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9780387291758.Subject(s): Science | Labor economics | Population | Economics | Labor Economics | Population Economics | Science, generalDDC classification: 331 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Jacob Mincer in Perspective -- Some Brief Remarks on the Life and Work of Jacob Mincer -- An Interview with Jacob Mincer -- Acceptance Speech Upon Receiving the First Iza Prize November 24th 2002 in New York -- Columbia’s Labor Workshop in the 1960s -- Working with Jacob Mincer: Reminiscences of Columbia’s Labor Workshop -- Labor Economics Mincer-Style: A Personal Reflection -- Remarks Following the Final Session of the Conference in his Honor, Held at Columbia University on July 15, 2002 -- The New Home Economics at Columbia and Chicago -- Jacob Mincer on Technology -- Technology and the Labor Market -- Jacob Mincer and Human Capital: New Perspectives -- Proving Mincer Right: Mincer’s Overtaking Point and the Lifecycle Earnings Distribution -- Jacob Mincer, Experience and the Distribution of Earnings -- The “Mincer Equation” Thirty Years After Schooling, Experience, and Earnings -- Mincer and the New Home Economics -- Jacob Mincer and Labor Supply — Before and Aftermath -- Household Production and Health -- Household Production and Children.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This volume contains essays by or about Jacob Mincer who, along with Gary Becker, is a founding father of modern empirical labor economics. His methodology analyzes the economics of the working world, and his human capital model is a fundamental tool in empirical economics. This is a very personal collection. It not only examines Mincer’s research; it also assesses the impact of his work on the careers of several important economists and includes portions of Mincer’s correspondence with those scholars. Shoshana Grossbard is professor of economics at San Diego State University and founding editor of the Review of Economics of the Household. She graduated from the University of Chicago where she studied New Home Economics with Jacob Mincer and Gary Becker. Professor Grossbard teaches and lectures throughout the world and is the author of five previous books and more than 40 journal articles.
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E books E books PK Kelkar Library, IIT Kanpur
Available EBK5513
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Jacob Mincer in Perspective -- Some Brief Remarks on the Life and Work of Jacob Mincer -- An Interview with Jacob Mincer -- Acceptance Speech Upon Receiving the First Iza Prize November 24th 2002 in New York -- Columbia’s Labor Workshop in the 1960s -- Working with Jacob Mincer: Reminiscences of Columbia’s Labor Workshop -- Labor Economics Mincer-Style: A Personal Reflection -- Remarks Following the Final Session of the Conference in his Honor, Held at Columbia University on July 15, 2002 -- The New Home Economics at Columbia and Chicago -- Jacob Mincer on Technology -- Technology and the Labor Market -- Jacob Mincer and Human Capital: New Perspectives -- Proving Mincer Right: Mincer’s Overtaking Point and the Lifecycle Earnings Distribution -- Jacob Mincer, Experience and the Distribution of Earnings -- The “Mincer Equation” Thirty Years After Schooling, Experience, and Earnings -- Mincer and the New Home Economics -- Jacob Mincer and Labor Supply — Before and Aftermath -- Household Production and Health -- Household Production and Children.

This volume contains essays by or about Jacob Mincer who, along with Gary Becker, is a founding father of modern empirical labor economics. His methodology analyzes the economics of the working world, and his human capital model is a fundamental tool in empirical economics. This is a very personal collection. It not only examines Mincer’s research; it also assesses the impact of his work on the careers of several important economists and includes portions of Mincer’s correspondence with those scholars. Shoshana Grossbard is professor of economics at San Diego State University and founding editor of the Review of Economics of the Household. She graduated from the University of Chicago where she studied New Home Economics with Jacob Mincer and Gary Becker. Professor Grossbard teaches and lectures throughout the world and is the author of five previous books and more than 40 journal articles.

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