Creating a Learning Society
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Book Name: Creating a Learning Society
Writer: oseph E. Stiglitz
Description
While this talk speaks to a continuation of my exceptionally productive
joint effort with Bruce Greenwald, expanding now for more than three
decades, my work on the points secured here returns to my days as a
graduate understudy, with 50 years of collected obligations. I have to
start by particularly expressing gratitude toward two of my instructors, who were available at the
address at which the previous form of these thoughts was introduced,
Kenneth Arrow and Robert Solow. At the time I was an alumni understudy,
development hypothesis was extremely popular, and endogenous development hypothesis—
clarifying the pace of mechanical advancement—assimilated a lot of our
consideration. I was lucky to have the option to invest energy at MIT as well as
additionally at the University of Chicago and Cambridge University. At MIT, I
ought to recognize the impact of Evsey Domar, Paul Samuelson, and
Franco Modigliani; at Cambridge, of Nicholas Kaldor, James Meade,
James Mirrlees, David Champernowne, and Frank Hahn. Hirofumi
Uzawa brought a gathering of us together from all through the United States
for a mid year at the University of Chicago to talk about these issues—
counting George Akerlof, Eytan Sheshinki, and Karl Shell. While at
Cambridge, I started my joint efforts with Tony Atkinson and Partha
Dasgupta, and the thoughts created with them saturate this book.
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