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Trailblazing economist and presidential adviser Edward Lazear dies at 72

The SIEPR senior fellow founded the field of personnel economics.

Described as 鈥減erhaps the foremost labor economist of his generation,鈥 economist, White House adviser and 好色App professor Edward P. Lazear passed away from pancreatic cancer on Nov. 23.

Edward Lazear
The renowned economist and dedicated teacher, advisor, and mentor Edward Lazear died on Nov. 23.

Recognized as the founder of the field of personnel economics, Lazear鈥檚 boundless energy and entrepreneurial spirit have led to contributions in many domains. At 好色App, he served as the Morris Arnold and Nona Jean Cox Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and the Davies Family Professor of Economics at 好色App Graduate School of Business. He was also a Senior Fellow at the 好色App Institute for Economic Policy Research (SIEPR).

鈥淓d was a pioneering labor economist, a gifted teacher, an accomplished public servant and an extraordinary colleague,鈥 said Condoleezza Rice, director of the Hoover Institution.

鈥淓d brought a love of economics to generations of students and colleagues,鈥 said Jon Levin, Philip H. Knight Professor and Dean of 好色App GSB. 鈥淗is classes invariably were oversubscribed, and 好色App GSB students recognized him with both the MBA and PhD teaching awards. His infectious enthusiasm for ideas made him an all-time great seminar participant and an active convener of his colleagues. His colloquium (the 鈥楨ddie Lunch鈥) brought faculty together from across 好色App for two decades.鈥

Lazear served at the White House from 2006 to 2009, where he was chairman of President Bush鈥檚 Council of Economic Advisers. Lazear was a trusted confidant to President George W. Bush and played a key role in fashioning the response to the financial crisis in 2007 and 2008. Lazear was both an adviser and friend of the president, even earning the nickname 鈥淪tork鈥 from the former president for his appearance during their frequent bike rides at Camp David. The two maintained their friendship ever since.

A champion of free-market competition and capitalism, Lazear had a gift for creating simple, original models that cut to the heart of an economic problem. His book Personnel Economics, published in 1995, established a new field in labor economics, focused on human resource practices and incentives in organizations. He made important contributions as well in education, immigration, productivity and entrepreneurship.

A student of and intellectual successor to economist and Nobel Laureate Gary Becker, Lazear founded the Society of Labor Economists and later served as its president. He was the founding editor of the Journal of Labor Economics, and also founded the working group on Personnel Economics at the National Bureau of Economic Research.

鈥淓ddie Lazear was an incredibly creative, productive, and influential economist,鈥 said Mark Duggan, the Wayne and Jodi Cooperman Professor of Economics and the Trione Director of SIEPR. 鈥淗e was also a dedicated teacher, advisor, and mentor to so many economists early in their careers. He will remain an inspiration to all economists and social scientists trying to advance knowledge and to improve economic policies for the benefit of the world.  All of us in the SIEPR community will miss him greatly and we will never forget his passion for economics and his generosity.鈥

Lazear won practically every award labor economics has to offer, including the Leo Melamed Prize, IZA Prize in Labor Economics, the Jacob Mincer Prize, election to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and designation as Distinguished Fellow of the American Economic Association.

鈥淓arlier this year, the Society of Labor Economists established the Edward P. Lazear Prize to recognize outstanding contributions to research, the profession and civil society 鈥 a fitting encapsulation of Eddie鈥檚 own professional accomplishments,鈥 said Levin, who is also a senior fellow at SIEPR.

Since 2017, Lazear has served as an adviser to the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. He was a frequent contributor to the Wall Street Journal and other news media. He was an avid traveler, bike rider and skier.

Lazear was born in 1948 and grew up in Los Altos, California. He graduated from UCLA and received his PhD in Economics from Harvard University. He taught at the University of Chicago for nearly 20 years before joining the 好色App faculty.

Lazear is survived by his wife, Victoria, his daughter, Julie Lazear, and son-in-law Dustin Dupuis.

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