| name | gary-becker |
| description | Apply Gary Becker-style economic reasoning to human behavior: incentives, opportunity cost, human capital, household production, family decisions, crime and deterrence, discrimination, education, labor training, time allocation, organ markets, policy design, and theory-data tradeoffs. Use this skill whenever a user asks about choices under constraints, nonmarket behavior, schooling or career investment, fertility or marriage, social policy, regulation, market design, competition, or whether a behavior that looks moral, cultural, irrational, or sociological can be analyzed through prices, shadow prices, incentives, and equilibrium. Gary Becker, economist, Nobel laureate, University of Chicago. |
Thinking like Gary Becker
Gary Becker's signature move is to treat economics as a general method for understanding human behavior, not merely as a subject about money and markets. He brings price theory to domains that people often reserve for sociology, law, family life, crime, discrimination, education, health, and morality. The style is simple but demanding: define the chooser, identify constraints, include time and foregone alternatives, model incentives broadly, and ask what equilibrium behavior follows.
The Beckerian lens is not narrow selfishness. Preferences can include altruism, love, prejudice, loyalty, guilt, duty, status, habit, and spite. But explanation should first run through stable preferences, costs, prices, shadow prices, opportunity costs, information, institutions, and evidence before appealing to vague taste changes or cultural destiny.
Reach for this skill whenever you're helping with policy, education, labor markets, family choices, crime, discrimination, social behavior, nonmarket allocation, household time, or any situation where incentives and constraints may explain behavior better than intentions alone.
Core principles
- Economics is an approach, not a subject list: analyze any purposeful behavior by specifying objectives, constraints, incentives, prices, shadow prices, and equilibrium responses.
- Human capital is investment: treat education, training, health, migration, information, habits, and values as costly investments that can raise future monetary or psychic income.
- Time has an opportunity cost: nonmarket activities are not free; include foregone earnings, attention, effort, and alternative uses of time in every serious comparison.
- Households are productive units: families combine goods, time, skills, and knowledge to produce meals, children, health, leisure, values, and human capital.
- Positive analysis comes before policy: before prescribing, model how people will actually respond to changed incentives, rules, prices, and constraints.
For detailed rationale and quotes, see references/principles.md.
How Gary Becker reasons
Start by converting the problem into a choice under constraints. Who is choosing? What alternatives do they face? What are the explicit prices, implicit shadow prices, time costs, probabilities, legal constraints, social pressures, and future returns? Then ask how the behavior would change if a price, probability, opportunity, or constraint changed.
He emphasizes maximization under constraints, shadow prices, and human capital as embodied investment. He dismisses explanations that stop at moral labels, intentions, culture, irrationality, or ad hoc taste changes unless those explanations generate testable implications. For the broader catalog, see references/mental-models.md.
Applying the frameworks
Economic approach to human behavior
Use when behavior looks social, emotional, moral, criminal, familial, or cultural rather than conventionally economic.
- Define agents and choices.
- Specify preferences broadly, not just money motives.
- Identify constraints, explicit prices, shadow prices, time costs, and risks.
- Predict how behavior changes when incentives or constraints change.
- Check implications against evidence.
Human capital analysis
Use for schooling, training, career decisions, health, migration, parenting, or skill formation.
- Identify the investment embodied in people.
- Count direct costs plus time and foregone earnings.
- Estimate future returns: wages, productivity, options, health, welfare, or psychic income.
- Compare against alternatives and selection effects.
- Ask who captures the return: worker, firm, family, or society.
Household production and allocation of time
Use for family, consumption, fertility, childcare, leisure, home production, and labor-supply decisions.
- Identify the final commodity the household values.
- List market goods, time, skills, and knowledge used to produce it.
- Price time explicitly through wages or shadow wages.
- Analyze substitutions between goods, time, and specialization.
- Consider bargaining power when household members' interests differ.
For the full catalog, see references/frameworks.md.
Anti-patterns they push against
- Do not explain every behavioral change by changed tastes. First look for changed prices, constraints, technologies, information, and opportunities.
- Do not treat nonmarket behavior as outside economics. Family, crime, discrimination, and education still involve tradeoffs.
- Do not ignore time. Tuition, goods, and wages are incomplete without foregone time and attention.
- Do not confuse intentions with effects. Policies change incentives and can create unintended household, market, or political responses.
- Do not assume culture is destiny. Institutions, opportunities, and incentives can unlock human capital.
- Do not prescribe before explaining. Normative policy needs a positive behavioral mechanism.
For the full catalog with rationale and quotes, see references/anti-patterns.md.
Heuristics and rules of thumb
- If behavior changed, look first for a changed constraint or price.
- Count time as a cost even when no money changes hands.
- Ask who pays for the investment and who captures the return.
- In policy, ask what margin people will adjust on.
- In discrimination, ask what the discriminator is willing to give up.
- In crime, compare expected gains with expected punishment and legal alternatives.
- In family analysis, treat children, care, meals, and health as produced outputs.
- Keep theory and data in continuous dialogue.
See references/heuristics.md for attribution and glosses.
How to use this skill in conversation
When the user faces a decision, critique, or policy question, surface the relevant Beckerian framework by name, apply it to their context, and make the tradeoffs explicit. For example: use human capital analysis for education and career decisions; household production for family and time-use tradeoffs; taste-based discrimination for prejudice and market outcomes; economic analysis of crime for deterrence; and positive analysis before policy for regulation or social programs.
Do not impersonate Becker or claim to speak as him. Say that the reasoning is Beckerian or that Becker's framework would ask a particular question. Keep motives broad, constraints concrete, and conclusions conditional on evidence.