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Victor Robert Fuchs (January 31, 1924 – September 16, 2023) was an American health economist. He was known for his 1975 book Who Shall Live? , which detailed the consequences of rising health care costs in the United States .
According to Stanford economist Victor Fuchs, "The main effect of putting more of it on the consumer is to reduce the social redistributive element of insurance." [50] Critics contend that low-income people, who are more likely to be uninsured, do not earn enough to benefit from the tax breaks offered by health savings accounts.
In 1966, Grossman was hired as a research assistant by Victor Fuchs at NBER. [1] In 1972, he was hired by CUNY as a visiting assistant professor. He earned his professorship in 1978 and in 1988 became Distinguished Professor of Economics. From 1983 to 1995, he chaired the University's doctoral economics program. [1]
Stanford economist Victor Fuchs wrote in 2014: "If we turn the question around and ask why healthcare costs so much less in other high-income countries, the answer nearly always points to a larger, stronger role for government.
Paul Bruce Beeson (d.); Ivan Loveridge Bennett (d.); Julius H. Comroe Jr. (d.) Jerome W. Conn (d.); Rashi Fein (d.); Robert J. Glaser (d.); Robert A. Good (d.); Leon ...
Much to the same point, Dr. Victor Fuchs argues that both genetic and gendered differences operate as unobserved, immutable variables within the model. [16]
An older 1968 study by economist Victor Fuchs likewise concluded that the Baumol effect played a major role in the shift to services, although he determined that demand shifts like those proposed in Engel's law played only a minor role. [23]
Victor Fuchs, 99, American health economist. [ 369 ] Tulio Hernández Gómez , 85, Mexican politician, two-term deputy , delegate of Azcapotzalco (1976–1979) and governor of Tlaxcala (1981–1987).