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10 - Finding a Niche

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2014

Barry Eichengreen
Affiliation:
University of California, Berkeley
Michael Szenberg
Affiliation:
Touro College, New York
Lall Ramrattan
Affiliation:
Pace University, New York
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Summary

Becoming a professor was easier than becoming an economist. Growing up in Berkeley I was surrounded by professors; they dominated my parents’ dinner parties, though my mother and father themselves were not academics. The conversation touched on book projects, sabbatical plans, and foreign travel. There was the security of a regular paycheck but, so it seemed, no one resembling a boss.

Growing up in Berkeley had its distinctive aspects. An outing for the socially conscious among my high school classmates was going down to the university and getting tear-gassed. At about this time the high school curriculum compelled one to choose between the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities tracks. Social sciences were irresistible for someone growing up in this political petri dish. The natural sciences track, in contrast, would have meant more math. Early decisions have long-term consequences.

The University of California, Santa Cruz, where I was an undergraduate, was another child of the 1960s. Intended as an alternative to factory schools like Berkeley, it had no grades, few major and breadth requirements, and little intellectual structure. Students were encouraged to design their own majors. This encouraged healthy disrespect for conventional academic boundaries, something that comes in handy for an economic historian. Santa Cruz also sent me for my junior year to the University of St. Andrews. St. Andrews students met periodically with a tutor to discuss assignments and read papers. My tutor was the Spanish economic historian Geoffrey Parker. In my senior year back at Santa Cruz, the department hired as a visitor a brilliant graduate student from Stanford, Flora Gill, to teach a course in economic history.

Type
Chapter
Information
Eminent Economists II
Their Life and Work Philosophies
, pp. 129 - 144
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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References

Sterling in Decline: The Devaluations of 1931, 1949 and 1967, with Alec Cairncross (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1983)
Golden Fetters: The Gold Standard and the Great Depression, 1919–1939 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992)

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