Last updated on: 12/31/2008 10:54:00 AM PST
Big Three Auto Bailout Home Page > Source Biographies > >Gary S. Becker, PhD
Gary S. Becker, PhD Biography |
Title: |
Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago and 1992 Nobel Prize winner in Economics |
Position: |
Con to the question "Should the Big Three Car Manufacturers Be Bailed out by the US Government?" |
Reasoning: |
"I believe bankruptcy is better than a bailout for American consumers and taxpayers... Bankruptcy would help GM and Ford become more competitive by abrogating significant parts of their labor contracts with the UAW [United Auto Workers]. One of the greatest needs would be sizable reduction in their health costs through sharp increases in the deductibility and co-payments, and a reduced coverage of medical procedures. Bankruptcy should also help bring the wage rates of GM and Ford in line with those of foreign producers in the US. Some of their pension liabilities may be shifted onto the Pension Benefit Guarantee Corp, but even that would be preferable to an overall bailout...
Is GM 'too big' to fail? I do not believe the company is too big to go into a reorganization -- which is what bankruptcy would involve. Such reorganization would abrogate its untenable labor contracts, and give it a chance to survive in long run. A bailout, by contrast, would simply postpone the needed reforms in these labor contracts, the business model of GM, and its management."
"Bail Out the Big Three Auto Producers? Not a Good Idea," The Becker-Posner Blog website, Nov. 16, 2008
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Theoretical Expertise Ranking: |
Experts Individuals with JDs, PhDs, other relevant advanced degrees, CEO's of major car manufacturing companies, and government officials with significant involvement in, or related to, automotive, business, and bankruptcy issues. [Note: Experts definition varies by site.] |
Involvement and Affiliations: |
Rose-Marie and Jack R. Anderson Senior Fellow, Hoover Institution, 1990-present Professor, Departments of Economics, Sociology, and the Graduate School of Business, University of Chicago, 1983-present Recipient, Presidential Medal of Freedom, 2007 Recipient, Medal of the Italian Presidency, 2004 Member, Advisory Committee to the Secretary of Defense, 2001-2004 Member, Board of Directors, Manhattan Institute, 1997-2003 Recipient, National Medal of Science, 2000 Recipient, Nobel Prize for Economic Sciences, 1992 Member, Academic Advisory Board, American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, 1987-1991 Columnist, Business Week, 1985-2004 Research Associate, Economics Research Center, National Opinion Research Center (NORC), University of Chicago, 1980 Member, Board of Publications, University of Chicago Press, 1971-1975 Ford Foundation Visiting Professor of Economics, University of Chicago, 1969-1970 Professor of Economics, Columbia University, 1960-1969 Member, Senior Research Associate and research policy advisor to the Center for Economic Analysis of Human Behavior and Social Institutions, National Bureau of Economic Research, 1957-1979 |
Education: |
PhD, University of Chicago, 1955 AM (Master's degree), University of Chicago, 1953 AB (Bachelor's degree), summa cum laude, Princeton University, 1951 |
Other: |
Recipient of Honorary Degrees from Hitotsubashi University (2005), Harvard University (2003), University of Athens (2002), University d'Aix-Marselles (1999), Hofstra University (1997), University of Rochester, University of Miami, University of Economics in Prague, Warsaw School of Economics (1995), University of Palermo, Columbia University (1993), Princeton University (1991), State University of New York at Stony Brook (1990), University of Illinois at Chicago (1988), Knox College, and Hebrew University (1985) |
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