:: easterl@usc.edu

Richard A. Easterlin is University
Professor and
Professor of Economics, University of Southern California. He is a
member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of
Arts and Sciences, a former Guggenheim Fellow, and past president of
the Population Association of America, and the Economic History
Association.
::Richard A. Easterlin
Contact address:
Department of Economics, KAP 300
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, California 90089-0253
Phone: (213) 740-6993
Fax (213) 740-8543
E-mail: easterl@usc.edu
Research interests:
Subjective Well-Being
Demography
Economic History
Research:
My basic research motivation has been to understand better various real
world conditions. Some of the things I've studied are:
- the reasons for the limited spread of modern economic growth;
- the meaning of welfare and its relation to economic growth;
- the transition from high to low mortality and fertility that has
invariably accompanied modernization;
- "long swings" of 15 to 25 years in population and economic growth
in the US and other developed countries;
- the post-World War II American baby boom and bust.
Progress on these problems has often involved empirical work to
establish more clearly the facts to be explained - such as estimating
regional incomes, reconstruction of trends in childbearing behavior in
the US, and establishing the rise of school enrollments in countries
throughout the world. It has required the use of economic theory to
organize data and formulate hypotheses, and led to new theorizing on
topics such as childbearing behavior and subjective well-being. It has
also called for work in other social sciences and for learning new
techniques and concepts that fall outside the purview of economics,
such as demographic methodology and theories of "relative deprivation",
"natural" (i.e. unregulated) fertility, and hedonic adaptation.
Currently I am studying changes in subjective well-being over the life
cycle, applying the demographers' technique of cohort analysis to
social survey data. The aim is to clarify the role in determining
people's feelings of well-being of circumstances such as living levels,
family life, health, and job conditions.
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