Fraser Institute News Release: New essay celebrates key ideas and contributions of Deirdre McCloskey


VANCOUVER, British Columbia, Feb. 24, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- A new essay—part of a collected series summarizing the lives and ideas of women who helped shape the free and prosperous societies we enjoy today—examines the key insights of Deirdre McCloskey whose humanistic view of economics has fundamentally changed the way economists approach their profession.

Published by the Fraser Institute, the Essential Women of Liberty is accompanied by a website and animated videos spotlighting McCloskey and other remarkable women.

“While McCloskey remains an analytical researcher who poses hypotheses and interrogates them with data, she’s also a grand theorist who draws on multiple intellectual fields,” said essay author Lynne Kiesling, a research professor at the University of Colorado-Denver and senior fellow of the Fraser Institute.

Born in Michigan in 1942, McCloskey earned her PhD in economics at Harvard University before accepting a teaching position at the University of Chicago where she made significant contributions to the use of quantitative methods in economic history.

In perhaps her most well-known work, McCloskey’s Bourgeois trilogy (published from 2006 to 2016) sought to understand why some countries prosper while others languish. In her trilogy, McCloskey explains the emergence of bourgeois civilization, the technological and commercial innovations it inspired, and how these innovations helped produce what McCloskey calls the “Great Enrichment”—the 3,000 per cent increase in living standards over the past 300 years.

She also pioneered a modern focus on the rhetoric of economics, emphasizing the need for economists to communicate clearly and concisely. And criticized much of modern economic method, arguing that economists overemphasize mathematical and statistical methods and overlook the importance of metaphor, narrative and other more humanistic forms of rhetoric.

McCloskey is currently a distinguished professor emeritus at the University of Illinois at Chicago and a senior fellow of the Fraser Institute.

The Fraser Institute will release the complete Essential Women of Liberty essay and video series on International Women’s Day (March 8, 2022).

To learn more about the Institute’s Essential Scholar series, visit www.essentialscholars.org.

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The Fraser Institute is an independent Canadian public policy research and educational organization with offices in Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, and Montreal and ties to a global network of think-tanks in 87 countries. Its mission is to improve the quality of life for Canadians, their families and future generations by studying, measuring and broadly communicating the effects of government policies, entrepreneurship and choice on their well-being. To protect the Institute’s independence, it does not accept grants from governments or contracts for research. Visit www.fraserinstitute.org