Vernon Smith: Adam Smith’s Relevance, Jimmy Carter’s Deregulation, and the Fed’s Biggest Mistake
My guest today is one of my favorite people in the world. Vernon Smith is the 2002 winner of the Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences for his pioneering work in experimental economics. He’s almost certainly the only male Nobel Prize winner who showed up with a ponytail and an Adam Smith bolo tie. More than anybody else, Smith is responsible for taking economics out of the lecture hall and testing its hypotheses by running actual experiments with living, breathing humans.
Born in Kansas in 1927, Smith has lived a life that sounds like a Bob Dylan song. His mother’s first husband died in a freak railroad accident, and she used the insurance money to buy a farm that sustained her family during the darkest days of the Great Depression. An engineering whiz, he graduated from the California Institute of Technology in 1949 and then turned to studying economics, first at Kansas University and then Harvard. He’s taught all over the country, especially at places far flung from big cities, doing much of his most important work at Purdue University and the University of Arizona. He’s currently at Chapman University in Southern California, where he created the Smith Institute for Political Economy and Philosophy, which seeks to “reintegrate the study of the humanities and economics in the spirit of Adam Smith.”
I caught up with Smith recently at Reason Weekend, an annual conference sponsored by the nonprofit that publishes this podcast. We talked about the upcoming 300th birthday of Adam Smith and why The Wealth of N
Article from Reason.com