Harvey J. Levin | |
Birth Date: | July 1, 1924 |
Birth Place: | New York, New York |
Nationality: | American |
Institution: | Hofstra University (1955–92) Columbia (1953–55, 1947–49) Penn State (1950–54) Bard (1949–50) Rutgers (1948–49) |
Field: | Regulatory economics, Communications economics |
Alma Mater: | Columbia (Ph.D. 1953, A.M. 1948) Hamilton (A.B. '44) |
Influences: | John Kenneth Galbraith John Maynard Keynes Broadus Mitchell William Vickrey |
Harvey Joshua Levin (July 1, 1924 – April 30, 1992) was an American economist. He was university research professor in the Department of Economics at Hofstra University (1989–92), Augustus B. Weller Professor of Economics at Hofstra (1964–89), and founder and director of its Public Policy Workshop (1975–92). He had previously served as professor at Columbia University. He was also a senior research associate at the Center for Policy Research.[1]
Levin is generally considered the first economist to propose the auctioning of broadcast frequencies as a means of allocating the airwaves as a natural resource. His work anticipated the evolution of television, satellites, cellular telephones, electronic remote boxes and wireless internet, and their demands on increasingly congested airwaves.[2] [3] [4] [5]
He consulted for the President's Office of Telecommunications Management, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), the FCC's Public Advisory Committee on the World Administrative Radio Conferences (WARC88), the Office of Technology Assessment of the U.S. Congress, the General Accounting Office, the Committee for Economic Development, the Department of Justice/Antitrust Division, and the Federal Trade Commission/Bureau of Economics.[6]
Growing up in an uneducated family of Jewish-Russian descent, Levin was accepted by Harvard University as an undergraduate in 1940 at the age of sixteen, after skipping two grades at Newton High School in Queens, New York. However, his family found it unaffordable and considered him too young for such a large institution. He partially worked his way through high school and college as a jazz pianist/arranger and later attended Harvard Law School as a Carnegie Fellow in Law and Economics.[7]
Originally planning to pursue English literature, he became fluent in seven other languages, including Japanese, by his college years.[8] While an undergraduate student, he served as a commentator and disc jockey for the radio station of Hamilton College.[9]
In World War II, he served as a Research Analyst and Foreign Language Officer in the Office of Strategic Services (later reorganized as the Central Intelligence Agency) in Washington, D.C. and Japan, drawing largely on his Japanese language skills.[10]
For forty years spanning five decades, Levin researched, published, and proposed innovative economic and regulatory solutions that anticipated — and later addressed — the problems of competing rights and access to the airwaves, or electromagnetic spectrum, and its overuse and congestion. According to his colleagues, he was several decades ahead of his time in addressing the economic ramifications of the radio spectrum, long before others were concerned with the airwaves as a resource.[11] [12] [13] [14]
Focusing on its political ramifications, Levin's work is also considered by many economists to be the first to illustrate the economic necessity and benefits of equitable, global allocation of the airwaves as a limited resource, and diversification of its ownership.[15] [16] [17] [18] He continued to penetrate the frontiers of communications economics even after it evolved into a highly pertinent field[19] [20] — an evolution due, in large part, to his own contributions.[21] [22] His colleagues in the field even complained that they were unable to complete the writing of a book he had started at the time of his death because his work was "too advanced" and far-reaching.[23]
Although he was a stickler for scientific evidence and economic viability, he also viewed economics as an art, and saw it as a vehicle for facilitating social progress. Among his proposals was a pricing mechanism that, in effect, ensured that latecomer users and emerging, underdeveloped countries would not be deprived of their use of the airwaves by the world powers or monopolies controlling the market.[24] [25] One of his last projects involved getting countries with satellites in orbit above less-industrialized nations to pay a kind of rent.[26] [27]
In pioneering the economics of the airwaves and space satellites by proposing market-based approaches to utilizing the spectrum, Levin was often met with skepticism and dismissal by government and industry officials — even, initially, disbelief that the airwaves were a resource at all. It prompted his creation of the phrase "The Invisible Resource", also the name of his 1971 book, which revolutionized the field.[28] [29] [30] [31]
Three years after his death, in 1995, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) began implementing Levin's long controversial proposals by licensing and auctioning off portions of the radio spectrum, or broadcast frequencies, culminating in the U.S. Telecommunications Act of 1996.[32] [33] [34] [35] In 1997, partially inspired by Levin's research, the U.S. Congress recommended a voucher program for allocating the use of outer space for transportation and satellites, in its appropriations bill for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).[36]
His field of work continues to be developed by such colleagues as Molly Macauley,[37] Eli Noam[38] and Thomas Hazlett.[39]
His legacy lives on in his numerous publications,[40] in U.S. communications policy,[41] [42] [43] [44] in his collections of personal papers at Columbia Institute for Tele-Information (CITI),[45] Hofstra University Archives[46] [47] [48] and Research Libraries Information Network,[49] [50] and in the work of scholars and think tank groups like CITI[51] and Resources for the Future.[52]
On September 23, 1964, Hofstra University's board of trustees awarded the newly created Augustus B. Weller Chair in Economics (Long Island's first fully endowed professorial chair) to Harvey J. Levin, then chairman of the university's Economics Department, who held it for the next twenty-five years.[53] The chair supported Levin's research that served as the basis for numerous articles and presentations, as well as his books The Invisible Resource – Use and Regulation of the Radio Spectrum (1971)[54] and Fact and Fancy in Television Regulation – An Economic Study of Policy Alternatives (1980),[55] and initial groundwork for the follow-up book Harvesting the Invisible Resource – Global Spectrum Management for Balanced Information Flows (originally scheduled for publication in 1994.)[56]
Along with the Augustus B. Weller Chair in Economics at Hofstra University (1964–89), Levin's research was supported in part by the National Science Foundation (1984–88, 1970–78), the Russell Sage Foundation (1978–79), and Resources for the Future (1980–82, 1964–69).[57]
He was a visiting fellow, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University, 1982–83, and a visiting scholar, Stanford University (Department of Economics/National Bureau of Economic Research, Hoover Institute, Center for Educational Research at Stanford), Summers 1982–91.[58]
He was also a Liberal Arts (Carnegie) Fellow in Law and Economics at the Harvard Law School, 1963–64, and a Brookings National Research Professor in Economics, 1959–60.[59]
Among other studies, Levin was author of Fact and Fancy in Television Regulation – An Economic Study of Policy Alternatives (Russell Sage Foundation and Basic Books, Inc., 1980), The Invisible Resource – Use and Regulation of the Radio Spectrum (Johns Hopkins Press, 1971), Broadcast Regulation and Joint Ownership of Media (New York University Press, 1960), and Business Organization and Public Policy (Holt-Rinehart, 1958), a collection of essays edited with commentary.[60] At the time of his death, he was at work on a subsequent book, Harvesting the Invisible Resource – Global Spectrum Management for Balanced Information Flows,[61] which was to be published by Oxford University Press.[62] [63]
He also published numerous scholarly papers on public policies towards television broadcasting, space satellites and the radio spectrum resource, and participated frequently in conference panels on the same, for the American Economics Association, the Annenberg Washington Program, the Atlantic Economic Society, the International Institute of Communications, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the International Communications Association, the National Academy of Engineering, the National Academy of Sciences, the National Research Council, the Pacific Telecommunications Council, the Annual Telecommunications Policy Research Conferences, and the Western Economic Association International.[64] [65]
In 1986, Levin was elected to membership in the Cosmos Club of Washington, D.C., an association of persons deemed to "have done meritorious original work in science, literature, or the arts, or ... recognized as distinguished in a learned profession or in public service".[66] [67]
That year, he also was invited to place his papers in the Archive of Contemporary History at the University of Wyoming, devoted to "the history and development ... of individuals who have played a prominent role in the twentieth century's social, political, legal and economic scene ..."[68] [69]
Levin was a member of the editorial board of Telecommunications Policy (1989–92), and the Society of Columbia Scholars and Harvard Law School Association of New York City (1991–92).[70]
He was also civically active with such organizations as the National Emergency Civil Liberties Committee, the National Citizens Committee for Broadcasting, the Committee To Protect Journalists, the Long Island Alliance for Peaceful Alternatives, and the Long Island Coalition for Fair Broadcasting Honorary Advisory Board.[71]
He worked with public figures ranging from Eleanor Roosevelt and Fred Friendly to George McGovern, and contributed opinion pieces to various journals including The New York Times and The Nation. He delivered numerous, community presentations dealing with censorship and legislation in Congress that impacted First Amendment rights.[72]
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