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3 - Personal Reflections on My Professional Life

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2014

John Y. Campbell
Affiliation:
Harvard University
Michael Szenberg
Affiliation:
Touro College, New York
Lall Ramrattan
Affiliation:
Pace University, New York
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Summary

In my middle fifties, and as a father of young adults who are choosing their paths in life, I find myself looking along my own path. I ask myself why I chose it, where it has taken me, and where it will lead next.

How I Became an Economist: Accidents and Ancestors

Seen from one point of view, my life as an economist is serendipitous, the accidental result of decisions that I made in order to postpone commitments to one career or another. Seen from another point of view, it was no accident that I became a macrofinance economist; perhaps psychological forces have steadily pushed me along a predetermined path.

I grew up in Oxford, England, in an academic family and was fortunate enough to have an intellectually intense education. The private schools I attended, the Dragon School and Winchester College, had their eccentricities but both challenged their students every day. I reached the moment when the English educational system demands that one choose a specialty even earlier than normal, at age fifteen.

Type
Chapter
Information
Eminent Economists II
Their Life and Work Philosophies
, pp. 45 - 56
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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References

Kremer, Michael, “The O-Ring Theory of Economic Development,” Quarterly Journal of Economics 108 (1993): 551–575CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gabaix, Xavier and Landier, Augustin, “Why Has CEO Pay Increased So Much?”Quarterly Journal of Economics 123 (2008): 49–100CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glaeser, Edward, Triumph of the City (Harmondsworth, Penguin Press, 2011)Google Scholar

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