Peter Biro alerts me to the passing of Janos Kornai.
Renowned Economist Kornai Dies Aged 94
and here
He was a bridge between East and West, between command economies and market economies. Here's his Google Scholar page: Janos Kornai.
When I met him, he was spending half his time at Harvard and half back in Hungary. At his retirement dinner from Harvard, someone asked him something along the lines of "what's the biggest difference between Hungary and the U.S.?" He answered that it was how people answered the question "How are you?" In Hungary, he said, people told you of their complaints, but in the U.S., everyone gave you a big smile and said "I'm fine, how are you?" He recounted how he thought the American answer was more cheerful, and that he would try to change the equilibrium in Hungary by answering like an American, when in Hungary. But this didn't work, he said (which is the problem with equilibria...) When he would reply that he was fine, the response he got was along the lines of "Of course you're fine, you live in the United States!"). So he resigned himself to the fact that equilibria are hard to change...
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