Early life Wassily Leontief was born on August 5, 1905, in
Munich, German Empire, the son of Wassily W. Leontief (professor of
Economics) and Zlata (German spelling
Slata; later Evgenia) Leontief (née Becker). Wassily Leontief Sr. belonged to a family of Russian
old-believer merchants living in
St. Petersburg since 1741. Evgenia (Genya) Becker belonged to a wealthy
Jewish family from
Odessa. At 15 in 1921, Wassily Jr. entered
Petrograd State University in present-day
St. Petersburg. He earned his Learned Economist degree (equivalent to
Master of Arts) in 1925 at the age of 19.
Opposition in USSR Leontief sided with campaigners for academic autonomy, freedom of speech and in support of
Pitirim Sorokin. As a consequence, he was detained several times by the
Cheka. In 1925, he was allowed to leave the USSR, mostly because the Cheka believed that he was mortally ill with a
sarcoma, a diagnosis that later proved false.
Harvard Leontief joined
Harvard University's department of economics in 1932 and in 1946 became
professor of economics there. In 1949, Leontief used an early computer at Harvard and data from the
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics to divide the U.S. economy into 500 sectors. Leontief modeled each sector with a linear equation based on the data and used the computer, the
Harvard Mark II, to solve the system, one of the first significant uses of computers for mathematical modeling, along with
George W. Snedecor's usage of the
Atanasoff–Berry computer. Leontief set up the Harvard Economic Research Project in 1948 and remained its director until 1973. Starting in 1965, he chaired the
Harvard Society of Fellows.
New York University In 1975, Leontief joined
New York University and founded and directed the Institute for Economic Analysis. He taught graduate and undergraduate classes. ==Personal life==