Changes in the Process of Aging during the Twentieth Century – Disparities in Chronic Diseases during the Course of the Twentieth Century

Robert W. Fogel

Charles R. Walgreen Distinguished Service Professor of American Institutions, and Director of the Center for Population Economics, Graduate School of Business, University of Chicago

Charles M. and Martha Hitchcock Lectures

November 16, 2004
International House Auditorium — 2299 Piedmont Avenue, Berkeley

About the Lecture

Nobel laureate Robert Fogel of the University of Chicago explores the disparities in health and longevity by socioeconomic class which were once much more severe than today.

 

About Robert W. Fogel

Robert W. Fogel is widely recognized for his important contributions to economic science that further the understanding of long-term technological and institutional change. His early work focused on railroads and economic growth in American history. Since the late 1980s, Fogel’s principal research has focused on explaining the secular decline in mortality and the changing pattern of aging over the life cycle in the United States. In 1993, he was the recipient of Nobel Prize in Economics for “having renewed research in economic theory and quantitative methods in order to explain economic and institutional change.”

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