Anthony Lancaster | |
Birth Date: | 25 June 1938 |
Birth Place: | Eccles, Manchester, England |
Death Place: | Providence, Rhode Island, U.S. |
Field: | Bayesian econometrics |
Doctoral Advisor: | Michael James Farrell |
Doctoral Students: | Guido Imbens |
Anthony Lancaster (June 25, 1938 – December 10, 2022) was a British-American Bayesian econometrician. He was the Herbert H. Goldberger Professor Emeritus at Brown University and a fellow of the Econometric Society from 1991 until his death.[1]
Lancaster was born in Eccles, Manchester, on June 25, 1938. He failed his eleven-plus, but passed at a second attempt and spent the next four years at the bottom of the C stream[2] at King George V Grammar School, Southport.[3] He gained a first class honours in economics from the University of Liverpool in 1959. He was awarded a State Studentship and moved to St Catharine's College, Cambridge, where he earned a doctorate in economics under M.J. Farrell.
In 1963–64 Lancaster finished his PhD dissertation as a research fellow at the Economic and Social Research Institute, Dublin,[4] and in 1964 he was hired at the University of Birmingham. In 1973 he moved to Hull University as a professor and became department chair. In 1986 he was hired by Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, USA. He served as department chair at Brown and retired in 2006. While at Brown he worked in health economics and was a member of the Department of Community Health in addition to the Economics department. Among the students whose graduate work he supervised were Nobel laureate Guido Imbens, Wilbert Van der Klaauw,[5] Orna Intrator, Tieman Woutersen and Peter Hansen.
Lancaster was an international fellow at the Centre for Microdata Methods and Practice at University College London.[6]
Lancaster married Jane Heawood in 1967; the couple had two sons, and a daughter from a first marriage.
Lancaster died in Providence, Rhode Island, on December 10, 2022, at the age of 84.[7]