William Vickrey died on October 11, three days after the
announcement of his being awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics, while
on his way to the Lincoln Institute for the annual research conference
of the Committee on Taxation, Resources and Economic Development
(TRED).
TRED meetings have been sponsored by the Institute for 20 years,
and Bill Vickrey was at every one of those meetings. Indeed, his
connection with TRED goes back even further, for he was one of the
committee's founding members more than 35 years ago. TRED began in
discussions among academic economists who were interested in
contemporary applications of the ideas of Henry George and were also
concerned with land and natural resources. Over the years, TRED's
membership expanded to include public finance and urban economists
interested in the use of land and economic phenomena related to how
things are arranged over space.
Bill Vickrey was the ultimate intellectual sparkplug of TRED
from the beginning. His wonderful inventiveness and irreverence came
out in inspired, seemingly off-the-cuff interventions in the
discussion, some of which have changed thinking about economics and
economic policy forever. For example, in one sally he imagined a
linear city in which all structures were truly mobile. This image made
it possible to think clearly about location, the effects of the
durability and immobility of structures, and appropriate land
policies, without being trapped by peripheral issues. No one could cut
to the quick like Vickrey.
TRED member Ed Mills of Northwestern University spoke to our
assembled group at the Institute shortly after hearing the news of
Bill's untimely death. "Bill Vickrey lived his life exactly as he
wished, right to the end," Mills said. "He died with his
boots on." Those of us who have been honored to know Bill for
some time have been shaped by our contact with him, and we will miss
him.
Dick Netzer
TRED member and visiting senior fellow of the Lincoln Institute