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杂谈 |
Hendrik S. Houthakker
(1924 - 2008)
http://www.economics.harvard.edu/files/houthakker.jpgs.
Harvard economist Hendrik Samuel Houthakker, 83, a member of the
Council of Economic Advisers for two presidents and holder of a
papal knighthood, died on April 15 at Genesis Healthcare in
Lebanon, N.H. After his retirement from Harvard in 1994, he divided
his time between his Cambridge office and family homes in Pomfret,
Vt., and Hanover, N.H., where he continued his studies in
economics. There he enjoyed life with his wife, the philosopher
Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka, his two sons, and his dogs.
Born in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, in 1924, Professor Houthakker
was the son of Marion (Lichtenstein) and Bernard Houthakker. After
completing graduate studies at the University of Amsterdam in 1949,
he did economic research at Cambridge University. In 1952, he
visited the U.S. and joined the staff of the Cowles Commission for
Economic Research at the University of Chicago. From there, he
taught at Stanford University from 1954-1960 before joining the
Department of Economics at Harvard in 1960. At Harvard, he became
the Henry Lee Professor of Economics.
Both Presidents Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon chose Houthakker
to serve on their presidential Council of Economic Advisors. He
continued his interest in public service as a consultant to
numerous government agencies, including the Commission on Supplies
and Shortages.
Probably his best known work was “Revealed
Preference and the Utility Function”
(Economica, 1950), in which, through development of the
strong axiom of revealed preference, he settled the last remaining
question concerning the integrability of demand functions based on
revealed preference. He also wrote two widely cited empirical books
on consumption, The Analysis of Family Budgets (with S.J.
Prais, 1955) and Consumer Demand in the United States,
1929-1970 (with Lester D. Taylor, 1966). In a brief but
classic article (“The Pareto Distribution and the
Cobb-Douglas Production Function in Activity
Analysis”, Review of Economic Studies,
1955) he showed how a Cobb Douglas aggregate production function
could emerge from a Pareto-distributed collection of
fixed-coefficient firms. He wrote frequently on international
trade, including the well known article with Stephen P. Magee,
“Income and Price Elasticities in World
Trade” (Review of Economics and
Statistics, 1969). His research also reflected continuing
interest in commodity and energy markets.
Professor Houthakker was a member of the National Academy of
Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Royal
Netherlands Academy of Sciences, and the American Economic
Association from which he received the John Bates Clark Medal in
1963. He was vice-president of that organization in 1972 and became
a Distinguished Fellow in 1989. He also served as president of the
Econometric Society in 1967. The University of Amsterdam and the
University of Fribourg awarded him honorary doctorates.
Although known for his dedication to public affairs, scholarship,
teaching and humanitarian ideals primarily in the field of
economics, he was also a long-time supporter of philosophy and the
fine arts. For 40 years, he fostered understanding and friendship
among cultures at the philosophical level through his generosity to
the World Phenomenological Institute, founded by his wife,
philosopher Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka. Although not a Catholic
himself, he organized an economic symposium at the Vatican on the
100th anniversary of Rerum Novarum, the papal
encyclical on the condition of the working classes. A friend of
Karol Wojtyla, Houthakker invited the Cardinal to speak at Harvard,
introducing him to Harvard and America as “the
next pope.”
In 2003, his old friend, then Pope John Paul II, chose Houthakker
to be a Knight Commander with Star in the Papal Order of Saint
Gregory, acknowledging his particular service to the Catholic
Church. He was inducted into the knighthood by Most Reverend Walter
J. Edyvean, Auxiliary Bishop and Vicar General of Boston, at St.
Denis Church in Hanover.
Known by his friends and colleagues for his modesty and humility,
combined with his elegant manner, Professor Houthakker had a
life-long appreciation for art as the son of a renowned fine arts
dealer in Amsterdam. In this country, he came to love the New
England countryside, especially his farm in Pomfret, Vt. Years ago,
he conserved 1,000 acres of property in Vermont.
He is survived by his wife of 52 years, Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka;
his children Louis Tymieniecka Houthakker, Jan-Nicolas Tymieniecka
Houthakker, and Isabella Romana Houthakker; and his brother
Lodewijk Houthakker of Amsterdam.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated on Friday, April
25th at 11:00 AM in Our Lady of the Snows Catholic
Church in Woodstock, VT with burial to follow at Riverside Cemetery
in Woodstock. Rand-Wilson Funeral Home of Hanover, NH is in charge
of arrangements. Information: 603-219-1893.
A memorial service will be held at in Cambridge, Massachusetts in
the fall of 2008.
Link to obituary in the Boston Globe, April 22, 2008.