NYU’s Easterly Presents Fall Henry George Lecture (Photo Gallery)

The Fall Henry George Lecture is one of the premier economics talks in the region.
An individual stands at a podium, looking out to a crowd.
William Easterly, Ph.D., professor of economics and co-director of the Development Research Institute at New York University, was the featured speaker at The University of Scranton’s Fall Henry George Lecture. Dr. Easterly participated in several events while on campus Oct. 21. More than a dozen previous lecturers in the series have won Nobel Prizes.

The University of Scranton recently welcomed renowned economist William Easterly, Ph.D., as the featured speaker at the Fall Henry George Lecture, an event that annually brings globally respected thought leaders to campus.

Dr. Easterly, professor of economics and co-director of the Development Research Institute at New York University, presented afternoon and evening lectures during his visit Tuesday, Oct. 21.

He also participated in a ceremony in the atrium of Brennan Hall, where his name was added to a commemorative plaque of Henry George lecturers. Thirteen previous speakers won Nobel Prizes.

After an afternoon lecture at Brennan Hall on the rise and fall of free markets, Dr. Easterly’s evening talk at the DeNaples Center was titled, “Violent Saviors: Development Lessons from the History of Colonialism.” Dr. Easterly addressed the consequences of coercive foreign interventions and emphasized the importance of empowering countries to freely make decisions.

Dr. Easterly’s visit also included attending a dinner held in honor of late alumnus John Kelly, a local realtor and member of the Schalkenbach Board of Directors whose generosity helped establish the Henry George series.

Dr. Easterly received a Ph.D. in economics from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1985, worked from 1985 to 2001 at the World Bank as an economist and senior adviser in the Macroeconomics and Growth Division and then worked until 2003 at the Institute for International Economics and the Center for Global Development. He then began teaching at NYU and is the author of three books, more than 70 peer-reviewed academic articles and numerous columns and reviews published in national outlets.

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