David Laibman | |
Birth Date: | 25 December 1942 |
Institution: | Brooklyn College |
School Tradition: | Marxist economics |
Doctoral Advisor: | Edward J. Nell |
Academic Advisors: | Adolph Lowe Stephen Hymer[1] |
Education: | Antioch College (BA) Ruskin College, Oxford The New School (PhD) |
David Laibman (born December 25, 1942) is an American economist. He is a professor emeritus of economics at Brooklyn College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He is the editor emeritus of Science & Society, a quarterly Marxist journal founded in 1936.[2]
Laibman attended high school in Cleveland, Ohio, matriculating at Antioch College and attending Ruskin College, Oxford.[3] He received a Ph.D. in Economics in 1973 at the Graduate Faculty of the New School for Social Research in New York.[4] His dissertation, The Invariance Condition for Value-Price Transformation in a Linear, Non-Decomposable Two-Sector Model, dealt with problems in Marxist value theory. Laibman teaches economic theory, political economy, and mathematical economics, at the undergraduate, masters, and doctoral levels at CUNY.
He is also a fingerstyle guitarist, especially its application to the ragtime music of the early twentieth century. With Eric Schoenberg, Laibman recorded The New Ragtime Guitar for Folkways Records in 1970. His solo album, Classical Ragtime Guitar, was released by Rounder Records in 1980.[5] Laibman has worked with a variety of artists in the early folk world, using his advanced finger picking technique. One notable album is Way Out West[6] by Scottish folk singer Alex Campbell, in 1963. Of note is the track "Orange Blossom Special" which showcases the talent that Laibman was developing.
He issued a DVD, Guitar Artistry of David Laibman.
Laibman is the author of five books:[4]