[star]The American Mind[star]

August 23, 2006

79-Year-Old Earns Economics Ph.D.

For my econ geek readers here's a story to let you know it's never too late to get that Ph.D.:

After a long and fruitful career, 79-year-old master’s degree graduate Herbert Baum has returned to the University of Chicago to earn his Ph.D. The oldest person ever to be awarded a doctorate by the University, Baum will receive the degree in economics Friday, Aug. 25.

When he left the University in 1951 to become a government agricultural economist in Washington, D.C., Baum had a master’s degree and was just short of writing his dissertation to earn a doctorate.

His dissertation contributes to agricultural economics by examining how to measure the impact of fees charged producers for commodity promotion and research. The thesis, based on a case study of the strawberry industry in California in which he was a leader, developed a model for researchers to understand the long-term value of the fees assessed growers. The model shows how the policies of the state strawberry commission, which supported research into improved varieties, improved production per acre and grower profitability.


Baum's dissertation committee included three Nobel Prize winners.

"University of Chicago Awards Ph.D. to Oldest Person Ever to Receive the Degree" [via A Constrained Vision]

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Posted by Sean Hackbarth in Economics at 10:31 PM | Comments (3) | Trackbacks (0)