Gaffney Gaffney

Gaffney - Definition and Overview

Mason Gaffney is an American economist, and critic of neo-classical economics. He has been Professor of Economics at University of California, Riverside since 1976.

He first read Henry George when a high school junior. After he served in the S.W. Pacific during World War II, this interest led him back to get a Ph.D. in Economics at Berkeley, where he tried to meet his teachers' skepticism with a dissertation, "Land Speculation as an Obstacle to Ideal Allocation of Land."

Since then he has published many books and articles on land use, economics, taxation, and public policy. He has been a Professor of Economics at several Universities; a journalist with TIME, Inc.; a researcher with Resources for the Future, Inc.; the head of the British Columbia Institute for Economic Policy Analysis, which he founded; an economic consultant to several businesses and government agencies; and a frequent speaker on economic topics, domestic and foreign, and in political campaigns. He has been a Director of R.S.F. since 1988.

Books

  • Concepts of Financial Maturity of Timber
  • LAND: A Special Issue (of House and Home Magazine)
  • Extractive Resources and Taxation
  • Oil and Gas Leasing Policy for Alaska, 1977
  • The Corruption of Economics.
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