Jagdish Bhagwati
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Jagdish Bhagwati | |
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Born | Bombay, British India |
July 26, 1934
Nationality | United States |
Institution | Columbia University |
Field | International economics, globalization, free trade |
School or tradition
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Neoclassical economics |
Alma mater | Bombay University (B.A.) Cambridge University (B.A.) MIT (Ph.D.) |
Influences | Robert Solow |
Jagdish Natwarlal Bhagwati (born July 26, 1934) is an India-born, naturalized American economist. He is a professor of economics and law at Columbia University.[1] Bhagwati is notable for his research in international trade and for his advocacy of free trade.
Contents
Early years and personal life
Bhagwati was born in 1934, into a Gujarati family in the Bombay Presidency during the British Raj, and received a BA from Sydenham College, Mumbai. He then traveled to England to study at St. John's College, Cambridge, receiving a second BA at Cambridge (in Economics) in 1956. He received the Ph.D. in Economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1961 for a thesis titled "Essays in International Economics", supervised by Charles P. Kindleberger.
Bhagwati is married to Padma Desai, also a Columbia economist and Russia-specialist; they have one daughter. He is the brother of P.N. Bhagwati, former Chief Justice of India and also of S.N. Bhagwati, an eminent neurosurgeon. Bhagwati and Desai's joint 1970 OECD study India: Planning for Industrialization was a notable contribution at the time.[2]
Career
After completing his PhD, Bhagwati returned to India in 1961, first to teach briefly at the Indian Statistical Institute, Kolkata, and then as professor of international trade at the Delhi School of Economics at the University of Delhi, from 1962 to 1968. From 1968 until 1980, Bhagwati was an economics professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[3] Bhagwati currently serves on the Academic Advisory Board of Human Rights Watch (Asia) and on the board of scholars of the Centre for Civil Society. He is a Senior Fellow of the Council on Foreign Relations. Bhagwati has previously served as an external advisor to the Director General of the World Trade Organization in 2001, as a special policy advisor on globalization to the United Nations in 2000, and as an economics policy advisor to the Director-General of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, from 1991 to 1993.
In 2000, Bhagwati was signatory to an amicus briefing, coordinated by the American Enterprise Institute, with the Supreme Court of the United States to contend that the Environmental Protection Agency should, contrary to a prior ruling, be allowed to take into account the costs of regulations when setting environmental standards.
In January 2004, Bhagwati published In Defense of Globalization, a book in which he argues:
"...this process [of globalization] has a human face, but we need to make that face more agreeable."
In May, 2004, Bhagwati was one of the experts who took part in the Copenhagen Consensus project.
In 2006, Bhagwati was a member of the Panel of Eminent Persons who reviewed the work of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). In early 2010, Bhagwati joined the advisory board of the Institute for Migrant Rights, Cianjur – Indonesia.[4]
At present, he is professor of economics and law at Columbia University.
Awards, honors and commentary
- Mahalanobis Memorial Medal of the Indian Econometric Society (1974)
- Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1982)[5]
- Seidman Distinguished Award in International Political Economy (1998)
- Padma Vibhushan Award (2000)
- Lifetime Achievement Award of the Indian Chamber of Commerce (2004)
- Order of the Rising Sun, Gold and Silver Star (2006)
Other awards include the Bernhard Harms Prize (Germany), the Kenan Enterprise Award (United States), the Freedom Prize (Switzerland), and the John R. Commons Award (United States). He has also received honorary degrees from the University of Sussex and Erasmus University, as well as others.[6][7]
Paul Samuelson, on the occasion of Bhagwati's 70th birthday festschrift conference in Gainesville, Florida on January of 2005 said:
"I measure a scholar’s prolific-ness not by the mere number of his publishings. Just as the area of a rectangle equals its width times its depth, the quality of a lifetime accomplishment must weight each article by its novelties and wisdoms.... Jagdish Bhagwati is more like Haydn: a composer of more than a hundred symphonies and no one of them other than top notch.... In the struggle to improve the lot of mankind, whether located in advanced economies or in societies climbing the ladder out of poverty, Jagdish Bhagwati has been a tireless partisan of that globalization which elevates global total-factor – productivities both of richest America and poorest regions of Asia and Africa."[8]
Jagdish Bhagwati was the fictional winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics in The Simpsons episode Elementary School Musical (The Simpsons).
Bibliography
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Books
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Articles
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See also
References
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External links
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- Homepage of Professor Jagdish Bhagwati, Columbia University website, accessed March 2004.
- Appearances on C-SPAN
- Works by or about Jagdish Bhagwati in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
- Jagdish Bhagwati collected news and commentary at The New York Times
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ [1] Archived November 22, 2010 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ [2] Archived August 3, 2004 at the Wayback Machine
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- ↑ [3] Archived March 6, 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ [4][dead link]
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- Pages with reference errors
- Articles with hCards
- Articles using small message boxes
- Commons category link from Wikidata
- 1934 births
- Indian emigrants to the United States
- Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge
- American economists
- Columbia University faculty
- Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Fellows of the Econometric Society
- Indian economists
- Indian academics
- Living people
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni
- Recipients of the Padma Vibhushan
- Trade economists
- University of Delhi faculty
- University of Mumbai alumni
- Recipients of the Order of the Rising Sun, 2nd class
- Writers about globalization
- Gujarati people
- Guggenheim Fellows
- Articles with dead external links from November 2014