They involved Nobel Laureates, such as Milton Friedman and Gary Becker, and other economic experts.
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Gary Becker, a Nobel prize-winning economist, thinks a loan system will create accessibility to low-wage workers.
No lesser lights than Nobel laureates Kenneth Arrow and Gary Becker argued over the topic in papers published between 1962 and 1972.
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Gary Becker, a Nobel-prize winning economist, and Richard Posner, a federal circuit judge and law professor, began a joint blog in 2004.
As economist Gary Becker notes in his blog, expansion of means-tested benefit programs also contributed to the slow recovery by making people less willing to work full-time.
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Perhaps it is possible to have a high-school system like this but not to teach Einstein, or the latest article from Gary Becker in the Quarterly Journal of Economics.
The one I use appropriately named Sensible Financial Planning is run by a University of Chicago-trained pupil of Nobel Prize winners Gary Becker, Robert Lucas, Thomas Sargent, and James Heckman.
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Some may be crackpots, but the list includes Nobel laureates (Gary Becker, Robert Lucas, Thomas Sargent) as well as other highly esteemed researchers (Robert Barro, John Cochrane, Eugene Fama, Greg Mankiw).
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Economists have been equating money and marriage ever since Nobel Prize-winning economist Gary Becker published his seminal paper "A Theory of Marriage" in two parts in 1973 and 1974--also, not coincidentally, in the Journal of Political Economy.
If the younger Barack Obama had spent a bit of time with Gary Becker at Chicago, or if he would set aside a weekend to read Freakonomics and SuperFreakonomics today, he would be wiser and his poll numbers would not be in free fall.
Nobel laureate Gary S. Becker argued that when the labor specialization in a marriage decreases--if, for example, both spouses have careers--the overall value of the marriage is lower for both partners because less of the total needed work is getting done, making life harder for both partners and divorce more likely.
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