Lawrence F. Katz | |
---|---|
Born | 1959 (age 57–58) Ann Arbor, Michigan |
Nationality | United States |
Institution | Harvard University |
Field | Labor economics |
Alma mater |
MIT (Ph.D.) University of California, Berkeley (A.B.) |
Doctoral advisor |
Henry Farber |
Doctoral students |
Jonathan Gruber Jeffrey R. Kling David Autor Justin Wolfers Heidi Williams Marianne Bertrand |
Information at IDEAS / RePEc |
Lawrence Francis Katz (born 1959) is Elisabeth Allison Professor of Economics at Harvard University and a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
He graduated from the University of California at Berkeley in 1981 and earned his Ph.D. in Economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1985.
He served as the chief economist at the U.S. Department of Labor from 1993 to 1994 under Robert Reich, Bill Clinton’s then Secretary of Labor.
Along with fellow Harvard colleague Claudia Goldin, who is a "personal as well as research partner", Katz wrote The Race Between Education and Technology in 2008, which argued that the United States became the world’s richest nation thanks to its schools. It was praised as "a monumental achievement that supplies a unified framework for interpreting how the demand and supply of human capital have shaped the distribution of earnings in the U.S. labor market over the twentieth century", and Alan Krueger of Princeton University said that it "represent[ed] the best of what economics has to offer".
Katz has been editor of the Quarterly Journal of Economics since 1991. He also serves as the Principal Investigator for the long-term evaluation of the "Moving to Opportunity", a randomized housing mobility experiment.