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Chicago Curriculum Fields

Chicago. Gordon, Fischer and Friedman Memos on Money Core Courses. 1972

When Milton Friedman went on leave from the University of Chicago in 1971-72, two assistant professors who had received their Ph.D.’s from M.I.T. were left minding the two core courses in “money” (a.k.a. “macroeconomics”) at Chicago. In this post I first provide the course listings and staffing for the core fields and then the transcription of an exchange of memos between Robert J. Gordon and Stanley Fischer (the two assistant professors just mentioned) on the one hand and their senior colleague Milton Friedman on the other.

The (then) young colleagues have tread most gingerly in the matter of overhauling the Chicago money courses. Friedman for his part has given them a “revise-and-resubmit” sort of response for their efforts. Perhaps Economics in the Rear-View Mirror will get lucky and receive a comment from Messrs. Gordon and Fischer about their memos’ ultimate impact on the Chicago core.

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Graduate Courses in 1971-72
Core Fields and Faculty

PRICE THEORY

300. Price Theory. McCloskey.
301. Price Theory. Becker, Evenson, Harberger.
302. Price Theory. Becker, H. Johnson
303. General Equilibrium Theory. Mundell.
307. Mathematical Methods in the Social and Administrative Sciences. Theil.
309. The Theory of the Allocation of Time. Ghez, Becker.

 

THEORY OF INCOME, EMPLOYMENT, AND THE PRICE LEVEL

330. Money: The Supply Side. Gordon
331. Money. Fischer, Telser.
332. Theory of Income, Employment, and the Price Level. Sjaastad, Zecher.
337.  Special Topics in Monetary Theory. Fischer.

 

 

 

Becker, Gary (Ph.D., Chicago, 1955; John Bates Clark Medal Winner, 1967). University Professor of Economics (at Chicago since 1970).
Recent research: Investment in human capital; the allocation of time; household production functions and non-market behavior; marriage and fertility; law and economics.

Evenson, Robert E. [visiting faculty] (Ph.D., Chicago, 1968; Associate Professor of Economics, Yale).
Recent research: economic development and agriculture.

Fischer, Stanley (Ph.D., M.I.T., 1969). Assistant Professor of Economics (at Chicago since 1969).
Recent Research: Monetary growth models; lags and stabilization policy; trade and capital flows.

Friedman, Milton [on leave, 1971-72] (Ph.D., Columbia, 1946; John Bates Clark Medal Winner, 1951; President of A.E.A., 1967). Paul Snowden Russell Distinguished Service, Professor of Economics (at Chicago since 1946).
            Recent Research: The optimum quantity of money; secular and cyclical changes in money and income; a theoretical framework for monetary analysis.

Ghez, Gilbert (Ph.D., Columbia, 1970). Assistant Professor of Economics (at Chicago since 1969).
Recent Research: A theory of life-cycle consumption; consumption and labor force participation; effects of education on consumption patterns.

Gordon, Robert J. (Ph.D., M.I.T., 1967). Assistant Professor of Economics (at Chicago since 1968).
Recent Research: Labor market theory and inflation; econometric models of wage and price determination; problems in measurement of capital.

Harberger, Arnold C. (Ph.D., Chicago, 1950). Professor of Economics (at Chicago since 1953).
Recent Research. Applied welfare economics; measurement of social opportunity costs of labor, capital, and foreign exchange; taxation and resource allocation.

Johnson, Harry G. (Ph.D., Harvard, 1958). Professor of Economics (Joint appointment with London School of Economics) (at Chicago since 1959).

Recent Research: Theory of international inflation; theory of effective protection; the two-sector model of general equilibrium; Keynesianism and monetarism.

McCloskey, Donald (Ph.D., Harvard, 1970). Assistant Professor of Economics (at Chicago since 1968).
Recent Research: Topics in the application of economics to British economic history; the Old Poor Law as a negative income tax; the economic effects of Britain’s move to free international trade.

Mundell, Robert (Ph.D., M.I.T., 1956). Professor of Economics (at Chicago since 1965).
Recent Research: Monetary systems and economic development; world inflation and unemployment; African currency systems; global trade policy.

Sjaastad, Larry A. (Ph.D., Chicago, 1961). Associate Professor of Economics (at Chicago since 1962).
Recent research: Project evaluation in underdeveloped countries; economics of research.

Telser, Lester (Ph.D., Chicago, 1956). Professor of Economics (at Chicago since 1958).
Recent research: Theory of competitive markets; game theory; the theory of the core; economics of information; determinants of the returns to manufacturing industries; equilibrium price distributions.

Theil, Henri (Ph.D., Amsterdam, 1951). University Professor of Economics (at Chicago since 1965).
Recent research: Econometric methodology and applications; mathematical and statistical methods in other social and administrative sciences.

Zecher, Joseph Richard (Ph.D., Ohio State, 1969). Assistant Professor of Economics and Director of the Undergraduate Program (at Chicago since 1968).
Recent research: Models of commercial banking; interest rates and expectations.

 

Source: Economics at Chicago (Departmental Brochure, 1971-72), p. 23, 26-30. This copy of the brochure found in the Hoover Institution Archives. Papers of Milton Friedman. Box 194, Folder 4.

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UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

May 22, 1972

 

To: Department of Economics Faculty
From: R. J. Gordon

Re: First Year Money Sequence

Stan Fischer, Dick Zecher, and I would like to propose the following reorganization of the topics taught in the first year graduate money-macro sequence. We have long felt that the present organization is suboptimal because (1) the student is taught two approaches to static income determination, one in 331 and one in 332, without sufficient coordination and integration of the two approaches, and (2) the separation between money supply in 330 and money demand in 331 does not work well, because money demand is involved in most of the topics covered in 330. The following reorganization puts static income determination of both the Quantity Theory and Keynesian varieties into course no. 1, in the sequence, then combines the money demand theory from the present 331 with the most important topics in the present 330 in course no. 2, and creates a third course devoted to dynamic topics.

We would like reactions, suggestions, and ideas. Presumably each course would be given twice on a staggered schedule.

 

COURSE NO. 1, to be called 331
taught in Fall and Winter

Static Income Determination in the style of Bailey and Patinkin
Elements of National Income Accounting
Doctrinal history and issues: General Theory, Patinkin vs. Friedman, Leijonhufvud
Theory of Consumption Function
Theory of Investment Behavior from Wicksell to Jorgenson

 

COURSE NO. 2, to be called 330
taught in Fall and Spring

Money demand theory
Tobin-Markowitz approach to portfolio allocation
Money supply theory
Financial intermediaries
Term structure and debt management
Modigliani-Miller and other issues in capital market theory

 

COURSE NO. 3, to be called 332
taught in Winter and Spring

Neoclassical nonmonetary growth models
Monetary growth models in the style of Foley-Sidrauski
Optimum Quantity of Money and welfare economics of inflation
Stability of inflation in Cagan-Mundell-type models
Multiplier-accelerator cycle models, simple inventory models
Models of Labor Market and Inflation
Simple models of open economies (could go in course no. 1)

 

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UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

Date: July 20, 1972

To: Professor Robert J. Gordon, Department of Economics
From: Milton Friedman, Department of Economics

In re: Your Memo of May 22 on First-Year Money Sequence

 

I have been hesitant to react to your schedule of topics both because I believe a teacher must decide for himself what he is going to teach but also because my reactions naturally derive from my own experience in teaching these courses and I have not re-thought the question afresh, particularly not in the light of 330.

Nonetheless for what they are worth, let me give my offhand reactions. The basic thing that disturbs me about all three courses is that they are set up as a series of separate topics with no organizational structure in them. For both the monetary approach and the income expenditure approach there is a clear logical structure which it seems to me it is desirable to use in organizing the material. For money as for price theory the obvious structure is the demand for money, the supply of money and the equilibrium produced by their interaction. In Course 2 called 330 you have the elements of money demand theory and money supply theory, but they are put in as if they were on the same level as approaches to portfolio allocation, financial intermediaries, term structures, and the like. Obviously they are not. If financial intermediaries have any relevance to the theory of money it is because they partly enter into the money supply process; it is partly because they may affect the demand for money. Similarly, the Tobin-Markowitz approach to portfolio allocation is simply a fuller exploration of the individual decisions that underlie the demand for money. Similarly, in the income expenditure approach the logical organization has to do with aggregate demand on the one hand and aggregate supply on the other side and their interactions. Consumption theory and investment theories of income then become components of aggregate demand.

I can understand elements of national income accounting and institutional and descriptive material about the monetary and banking system coming early in the courses and preceding the kind of formal theoretical apparatus that I have been talking about, but I find it hard to see the optional history and issues coming where they do in your outline. It seems to me that the desirable thing in these courses is to teach, as best we can, the substance of what we know and believe to be the correct theory. The history of the thought enters in both in introducing and motivating the discussion; also it has always seemed to me desirable that so far as possible we should use the writings of the great men in the field to develop the points that remain valid out of their writings, and finally at the very end I can see where in discussing where we go from here and what the open issues are it is desirable to bring out the question of current and past controversies.

In connection with Course 3, that also seems to be a collection of topics. It is very hard for me to see the organizational structure that underlies it. Presumably what really is in the back of this is the notion that Courses 1 and 2 will deal with static equilibria opposition and Course 3 will deal with dynamic change. But yet that doesn’t quite fit the role of the optimum quantity of money and the welfare economics of inflation. What precisely is a logical structure underlying this? Indeed let me repeat that question for all three courses.

Needless to say, there is more than one organization that would be logically coherent and would be effective in teaching the material within these three courses, so I don’t mean to put any special weight on the one I outlined above, but I do believe that you need to bring the skeleton of your organization more clearly in the open than it is brought in the list of topics in these three courses. Incidentally, one minor item is that I do not see anywhere in any of the topics where quantity equations à la Irving Fisher, Marshall, and the early Keynes would be discussed at all.

(Dictated but not read)

MF:gv

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UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO

Date: July 26, 1972

To: Milton Friedman, Department of Economics
From: Bob Gordon and Stan Fischer, Department of Economics

In re: First Year Money Sequence

Thanks for your memo to Bob of July 20th. Before reacting to your comments in more detail, let us attempt to restate the aims of the proposed revision. There were two major problems with the previous arrangement: (i) overlap of material in 330 and 331, (ii) 332 as a separate course was taught either as a hodge-podge of topics or as Keynesian multipliers run riot – by the time students had got through 331 the excuse for a separate income-determination course was slim.

The basic organizational structure, which the memo admittedly did not spell out, is based on the use of a common static model, as in Patinkin, Bailey, and equations (9) – (14) of your 1970 piece – as a starting point for discussion of both monetary and income-expenditure approaches (in 331). Once the basic issues are discussed in the framework of the common model – and this will occupy much of the 331 course – the examination of the building blocks of the model will begin. Since more time is needed for the building blocks than remains in 331, some pieces had to be placed in another course and it seemed sensible to separate out money supply and money demand. This makes 330 a self-contained course with the unifying principle that each topic contributes to a model of the monetary and financial markets, whereas the building blocks allocated to 331 are those of the commodity market. The placement of the labor market in the third course is the most arbitrary decision; it should probably be shifted to 331 so that the interaction between aggregate supply and demand can be adequately developed. (Incidentally, we apologize for giving the impression that each topic mentioned is to be given equal weight – we had in mind precisely the considerations mentioned in the second half of your second paragraph in writing, for instance, “Money demand theory” followed by “Tobin-Markowitz….”)

The idea in course 3 is indeed to emphasize dynamic elements. Here the intention is to use a simple common dynamic model, which has naturally to involve expectations and intertemporal maximization, and examine its behavior under a variety of assumptions on expectations etc. This leads naturally into the other topics mentioned in 3 – with the exception of the multiplier-accelerator and inventory models which tend to be sui generis and hard to fit into the overall scheme. (The open economy models also do not fit in very well.)

On your specific comments:

  1. We also realize that each teacher decides what he wants to teach, but in view of the facts that these are the basic money courses and that students take them from different people, we feel it important to try to have some uniformity of coverage.
  2. On the history of thought: we too use this to introduce and motivate the theories and we intend that it permeate the courses rather than be discussed in the middle of 331, as our memo now indicates.
  3. The optimum quantity of money comes right out of discussions of intertemporal optimization by individuals (as in your article) and it does seem that the “Dynamic” course is a good place to discuss it.
  4. The early quantity theorist’ views will obviously be discussed in great detail in the demand for money side of 330, and also in 331; this was one of the sub-topics we intended to be included under the 331 heading “doctrinal history.”

We would very much appreciate your commenting on this since we ourselves discussed several alternative organizations for the courses, and are far from certain that our proposal is optimal. Indeed, in the light of the fact that, as you say, everyone teaches what he wants, we felt some diffidence in making our proposal. But we do think it important to have some generally-greed-upon division of material for the three courses, if only to be fair to the students faced with the Core exam.

Source: Hoover Institution Archives. Milton Friedman Papers. Box 194, Folder 5.

Image Source: Milton Friedman (undated). University of Chicago Photographic Archive, apf1-06230, Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library.

 

 

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Columbia Curriculum Economists Fields

Columbia. Paul Douglas petitions to allow sociology courses for his second minor. 1916

The minutes of this meeting of the Columbia Faculty of Political Science’s Committee on Instruction caught my eye because of Paul Douglas‘ petition to substitute  a pair of sociology courses offered by Professor Franklin Giddings for a couple of intellectual history courses that would satisfy the distribution requirements for the second minor.

It appears that Douglas thus managed to have his major and both minors all in Group III (i.e., political economy and finance; sociology and statistics; social economy).

 

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Minutes of Committee on Instruction, February 21, 1916

A meeting of the Committee on Instruction of the Faculty of Political Science was held in Professor Seligman’s office on Monday, February 21, 1916.

Present: Professors Seligman, Giddings, Dunning, Shotwell and Dean Woodbridge.

The Chairman presented the following petitions, which were approved and referred by the Committee to the Dean for further action:

Petition from Miss Dorothy Stimson to divide her second minor for the doctor’s degree between Public Law and Politics.

Petition from Mr. Paul H. Douglas to offer Sociology 257 and 258, under the heading History of Thought and Culture, as a second minor for the Ph.D.

A statement from Mrs. H. L. Hollingworth, submitting the courses which she is offering for the Ph. D. Degree in Sociology, as follows:

Sociology 251-252 (2 full courses) Taken in 1912-13.
Psychology 263 (1 full course)        Taken in 1912-13.
(Social Psychology)
Educational Sociology 107-8 (2 half courses) Taken in 1912-13.
Sociology 257 (1 full course)           Taken in 1913-14
Sociology E1 43-4 (24 courses)       Taken in 1915-16
One more full course in Sociology to be taken next semester.

The statement was accepted as satisfactory.

A petition of Mr. Ahmed Shukri to substitute Arabic in place of Latin was granted.

The Chairman read the letter from the Secretary of the Faculty concerning the routine to be followed in the reporting of changes of courses vt [sic] students. After consider[ation] of the matter, it was decided that only those cases which involve changes of subjects, with their regular combinations, should be reported to the Faculty, and that they should be reported by the Dean, not by the Committee, the Committee in every case referring the petition to the Dean.

The Committee then took up the changes in courses for the following year as attached:

[…]

            The change in Economics is as follows:

PROFESSOR MITCHELL

Course on “Types” changed from one-term to two-term course.
Course on “Crises” withdrawn

[…]

Source: Columbia University Archives. Department of Economics Collection. Box 1, Folder “Committee on Instruction”.

 

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Catalogue Listings of Sociology Courses Petitioned by Paul Douglas

Sociology 257—The Evolution of Progressive Society. Professor Giddings.

Full or half course. F. at 2.10 and 3.10 515 K.

Factors of social evolution in Western Europe. Elements of progressive society; English civilization as example of evolution of progressive society; its ethnic elements; economic factors; folk thought, folk ways and mores; early family and tribal organization; development of a people with distinctive habits and characteristics.

(Identical with History 257.)
Given in 1915-16 and in alternate years thereafter.

 

Sociology 258—The Evolution of Progressive Society. Professor Giddings.

Full or half course. F. at 2.10 and 3.10 515 K.

Achievement of civil liberty in combination with social order; rise of industrial democracy; problems of social justice; individualism; collective responsibility for human progress.

(Identical with History 258.)
Given in 1915-16 and in alternate years thereafter.

Source:   Columbia University. Bulletin of Information (July 3, 1915). History, Economics, and Public Law: Courses offered by the Faculty of Political Science, 1915-16, p. 36.

 

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From the 1915-16 Regulations for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy

Doctor of Philosophy. — Each student who declares himself a candidate for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy shall designate one principal or major subject and two subordinate or minor subjects. Candidates are expected to devote about one-half of their time throughout their course of study to the major subject, and about one-quarter to each minor subject. Except by vote of the Executive Committee of the University Council, upon the recommendation of the Dean and the head of the department concerned, no candidate may choose his major and both minor subjects under one department. Major and minor subjects may not be changed except by permission of the Dean, on the approval of the head of the departments concerned. Both the professor in charge of the major subject and the Dean must pass upon the student’s qualifications for the course of study he desires to pursue, and approve his choice of subjects before registration can be effected. The subjects from which the candidate’s selection must be made are:

Under the Faculty of Political Science

Group I. — History and political philosophy: (1) Ancient and oriental history; (2) medieval history and church history; (3) modern European history from the opening of the 16th century; (4) American history; (5) history of thought and culture.

Group II. — Politics, public law and comparative jurisprudence: (1) Politics; (2) Constitutional Law and Administrative Law; (3) International Law; (4) Roman Law and Comparative Jurisprudence.

Group III. — Economics and social science: (1) Political economy and finance; (2) sociology and statistics; (3) social economy.

            A candidate for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy whose major subject lies within the jurisdiction of this Faculty must select one minor subject outside of the group which includes his major subject, and one minor subject within the group which includes his major subject. He must take, in his major subject, courses occupying at least four hours weekly during each required year of residence (provided that this number of hours be offered in the subject), and must also attend a Seminar during the period of residence. In each minor subject he must take courses occupying at least two hours weekly during each required year of residence.

Source: Columbia University, Catalogue, 1915-16, pp. 214-5.

Image Source: Paul H. Douglas’ college yearbook entry. The Bowdoin Bugle (1913).

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Chicago Exam Questions Fields

Chicago. Ph.D. Exam for Money, Banking and Monetary Policy, 1946

This transcribed Ph.D. examination for Money, Banking and Monetary Policy comes from a copy of the exam in the papers of Norman Kaplan at the University of Chicago archives. According to the Course Announcements, this field was covered by four quarter courses: both Money (330) and Banking Theory and Monetary Policy (331), and either The Theory of Income and Employment (335) or Business-Cycle Theory (432). In 1945-46 the first two courses were taught by Lloyd Mints. Jacob Marschak and Oscar Lange were scheduled to teach Economics 335 and 432, respectively, but I believe Lange was away that year in Washington, D.C. In any event the questions reveal emphasis on the material covered by Mints.

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MONEY, BANKING AND MONETARY POLICY
Written examination for the Ph.D.

Autumn Quarter, 1946

 

Time: 4 hours. Answer all questions.

 

  1. Discuss the effect of tax reduction on employment.
  2. Discuss the comparative advantages of fixed and flexible foreign exchange rates.
  3. A newspaper story of Jan. 21, 1946, on President Truman’s budget message, had the following headlines and first two paragraphs:

“TRUMAN MAPS FIRST DEBT CUT SINCE 1930
CASH ON HAND TO OFFSET ’47 DEFICIT.

“Washington—President Truman’s first budget proposes to spend $4,300,000,000 more that the government will collect, but for the first time since 1930, it won’t increase the national debt.
“Mr. Truman proposes to withdraw from the Treasury sufficient funds no only to offset this deficit but also to reduce the debt by $7,000,000,000.”

Discuss the monetary effect of this budget proposal. Would one expect the proposed debt cut to be deflationary or inflationary? Why? How would the effect compare with such alternatives as refunding the debt? Borrowing more to add to cash balances?

  1. The average amount of money (deposits plus hand-to-hand currency) in circulation in 1929 was $55 billion. At present (1946) the stock of money is $170 billion, or approximately three times the $55 billion of 1929. If we assume that the volume of transactions would normally (with a continued high level of employment) increase at the rate of 4% per annum, the volume of transactions in 1947, with a high level of employment, would then be approximately twice that of 1929 (1 compounded annually at the rate of 4% for 18 years amounts to 2.03). If we then assume that velocity will be the same in 1947 as it was in 1929, and that the stock of money will be the same in 1947 as in late 1946, we have approximately the following index numbers for 1947, using 1929 as a base:

M = 3.0
V = 1.0
T = 2.0

Therefore      P = 1.5

Discuss the reasonableness of the various assumptions made in this analysis and of 1.5 as the possible index of the price level in 1947. Is there any good reason for using 1929 as the base year rather than, say, 1940?

  1. The following statement, made in a recent CED [Committee for Economic Development] monograph, refers to the high post-war level of holdings of cash and government bonds by the public as compared with pre-war holdings:

“It is sometimes implied that the liquid assets will disappear as they are used. But money is not extinguished by use; it simply passes from the hand of the buyer to the hand of the seller. The use of liquid assets by some members of the public to buy goods, services, or securities from other members of the public will not reduce total liquid-asset holdings but only transfer their ownership.”

Suppose the liquid assets were used to such an extent as to bring on a substantial rise in the price level. Does the fact that they are not extinguished by use imply that the danger, from this source, of a further rise in prices would be unchanged?

 

Source: University of Chicago Archives. Norman M. Kaplan Papers, Box 3, Folder 5.

Image Source: 1936 Social Science Research Building. University of Chicago Photographic Archive, apf2-07476, Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library.

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Bibliography Fields Suggested Reading

Industrial Organization, Myron Watkins’ Bibliographic Essay, 1927.

I stumbled across the following excellent bibliographic essay in preparing the previous posting for Dewing and Opie’s 1929 Harvard course, “Economics of Corporations”. The essay provides coverage of the American literature, as well as that of the English, German and French, on the subjects of trusts and cartels, the economic theory of monopoly and regulation and it appears reasonably complete  for its time.

I have not found all too much information about the author:

Myron Webster Watkins was born April 2, 1893 in Milford, Michigan and died in Stamford Connecticut December 4, 1979.

A.B. from the University of Michigan, 1914; Ph.D. from Cornell 1917. Faculty member at the University of Missouri (19??-1926), then professor of economics at New York University (1927-1946).

Some information found in Watkins’ New York Times obituary, December 6, 1979. See also: University of Michigan, Catalogue of Graduates, Non-Graduates, Officers, and Members of the Faculties 1837-1921. Ann Arbor: 1923. Page 210.

The leading economist in the deregulation of the airline industry under President Jimmy Carter, Alfred Kahn, was an assistant to the antitrust experts George W. Stocking and Myron W. Watkins during World War II. [Burton Ira Kaufman, The Carter Years, New York: Facts on File, 2006, p. 244].

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Myron Webster Watkins. Industrial Combinations and Public Policy: A Study of Combination, Competition and the Common Welfare. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1927.

APPENDIX I
A GUIDE TO FURTHER STUDY

[pp. 297-314]

            The literature upon the broad problem of the organization of industry is too extensive to be brought under survey within the limits of this bibliographical note. But, attending simply to the material relating to the trust problem, so-called, the whole field may be conveniently divided into three sections. First, there is a mass of documentary and descriptive material reporting and analyzing actual experience with industrial concentration in different forms and in different spheres. In the second place, there is a considerable body of commentaries upon and criticisms of public policy toward the unified control of industry, including legal treatises and court decisions. Finally, there is the literature which deals with the theory of monopoly. These three divisions might be called the historical, the legal, and the economic literature relating to the trust problem. They do not, however, precisely correspond with the contributions of historians, lawyers, and economists, respectively. The major part of the more useful published material has been provided by economists — evidence that they are no longer a sect of theorists, cultivating in secluded cloisters a “dark and dismal science,” but have become a body of investigators of the practical administration of the business mechanism.

These three subdivisions of the field correspond, in the order given, to the aspects of the problem of industrial combination which appeal to students of different degrees of advancement. At once the most interesting and the most appropriate introduction to this branch of study is through the literature which sets forth, classifies, and interprets the actual phenomena which give rise both to political controversy and to economic speculation. Official publications of original source material, general in scope, are not numerous. Most comprehensive and exhaustive at the time of its first appearance, and still an illuminating collection of data of a type rarely made public authentically, is the Report of the United States Industrial Commission (Washington, in 18 volumes, 1900-01). The Commission, in investigating the general causes of social and industrial unrest, had occasion to call upon business leaders from every important branch of industry which had been affected by the consolidation movement to testify regarding the causes, specific circumstances, and effects of the formation of trusts. Most of this material appears in Volumes I, II, XIII and XVIII of the final report submitted to Congress. Comparable collections of source material are those describing the formation of cartels in Germany, and, more recently, the official survey of the industrial situation in Great Britain. In the report of an Imperial Commission of Inquiry appointed in 1902 (Kontradiktorische Verhandlungen über Deutsche Kartelle, 1903-06) and a survey subsequently made under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior (Denkschrift der Reichsregierung über das Kartellwesen, 1906-09) a number of copies of cartel agreements covering various branches of German industry are reproduced, together with the results of an investigation of their operation. The Report of the Committee on Trusts, of the Reconstruction Ministry, in England (Cd. 9236) London, 1919, evinces a complacent attitude toward the problem of industrial monopoly; but an intensive investigation of post-war trade conditions has subsequently been carried through under the direction of the Standing Committee on Prices and Trusts, a special subdivision of the Board of Trade. Sub-committees appointed for a great number of separate industries and groups of industries have, in their reports, brought to light a mass of information respecting the organization of British industry. No such comprehensive and official inquiry into the extent and character of industrial combination has been made in France.

Reports of more limited scope, setting forth the extent and character of market domination within specific industries, are more numerous. After the establishment of the Bureau of Corporations in 1903, a series of studies was published from time to time each of which treated of separate industries in which consolidations had been formed or control of the market attempted. The reports completed prior to the assumption by the Federal Trade Commission in 1915 of the functions of the Bureau include: the Report on the Beef Industry (1905); the Report on the Petroleum Industry, in three parts (1906,1907,1909); the Report on the Tobacco Industry, in three parts (1909, 1911, 1915); the Report on the Steel Industry, in three parts (1911, 1912, 1913); the Report on the International Harvester Company (1913); and the Report on the Lumber Industry, in four parts (1913,1914). This group of reports, while not entirely free from bias or even innuendo, represents the most exhaustive analysis of the causes and effects of industrial combination in specific spheres anywhere available. The method of procedure was both historical and statistical, and the data upon costs, prices, profits, and capital investment supply a wealth of material for analytical study which the Bureau itself only partially and, it must be added, imperfectly developed.

When the Federal Trade Commission succeeded the Bureau of Corporations as an investigating agency, it was also endowed with certain regulatory functions which seem to have impaired somewhat the performance of its research work. The reports of investigations conducted by the Commission during the first decade of its existence have, with minor exceptions, been fragmentary and of little more than ephemeral interest. There are, for example, a number of reports on costs of production in different industries made during the war or during the post-war boom to facilitate government price fixation or to frustrate “profiteering.” Among these may be mentioned the Report on the Book-Paper Industry (1917); the Report on the Baking Business (1917); the Report on Flour Milling and Jobbing (1918); revised (1920); the Report on Canned Foods (1918); the Report on the Leather and Shoe Industry, 1914-18 (1919); the Report on Copper (1919); the Report on Sugar Supply and Prices (1920); and the series of Coal Cost Reports (1920) dealing with conditions in different production districts. More pretentious investigations reported by the Commission are: the Report on the Meat Packing Industry, in five parts (1918); the Report on the Grain Trade, in five volumes (1920); and the Report on Household Furnishings Industries, in three volumes (1923, 1924). If the industries subject to these investigations were made the object of periodic inquiry the shortcomings of the method of “sampling” the current situation might be largely eliminated. It is possible that this course may eventually be consciously adopted, but at present the only illustrations of it appear to have come about casually, to wit, the Report on Pipe Line Transportation of Petroleum (1916); the Report on the Price of Gasoline in 1915 (1917); the Report on the Pacific Coast Petroleum Industry (1921); and the Report on the Petroleum Industry in Wyoming (1921); the Report on the Fertilizer Industry (1916), ibid. (1923); and the Report on the Tobacco Industry (1921), followed by the Report on the Prices of Tobacco Products (1922). There are obvious positive advantages to commend the policy of recurrent inquiries into industrial and market conditions in the more prominent branches of trade.

Two recent reports by special government commissions may be noted as supplementary to this list of Federal Trade Commission Reports. The Report of the United States Coal Commission and the Hearings before the Joint Commission of Agricultural Inquiry, 67th Congress, 1st Session (volumes I, II, and III) (Washington, 1924), the latter assembling a mass of information on costs of different systems of market distribution, are similar in comprehensiveness to the investigations made by the Bureau of Corporations.

In the numerous unofficial studies of the growth of combinations in various industries the beginner will find some of the most absorbing chapters which the literature upon the trust movement affords. Collections of material covering several industries have been made by Ripley, W. Z., Trusts, Pools and Corporations (Boston, 1916); Dewing, A. S., Corporate Promotions and Reorganizations (Cambridge, 1914); and Stevens, W. H. S., Industrial Combinations and Trusts (New York, 1913). The latter is a compendium of original documents and other source material drawn mostly from court records. Less reliable, but utilizing a mass of information drawn from journalistic sources, is The Truth About the Trusts, by John Moody (New York, 1904). It is, of course, confined primarily to the circumstances surrounding the formation of the early combines, including the financial features of their promotion. Laying emphasis on deeper forces, but proceeding nevertheless on a faulty hypothesis, the late President C. R. Van Hise in Concentration and Control (New York, 1912), brought together a great body of data on the growth of large-scale operations in various industries, and endeavored to connect this tendency directly with the consolidation movement as exhibited in a number of branches of industry.

Similar descriptions of monopolistic organization in England may be found in Macrosty, J. W., The Trust Movement in British Industry (London, 1907), and in Rees, J. M., Trusts in British Industry (London, 1922). The latter work, which is not carefully done, is based almost entirely upon the series of reports on conditions in different industries prepared by the Standing Committees on Prices and Trusts of the Board of Trade, already alluded to. For the development of combinations in France no work of general scope is available, though interesting descriptions and comment upon certain pools and corners will be found in Rousiers, P. de, Les Syndicats Industriels de Producteurs (Paris, 1912), and in Dolleans, Edouard, De L’Accaparement (Paris, 1902). Neither of these is essentially a compendium of information, however. The former is in its way a classic. After recounting the development of the trust movement in the United States, Germany, and France, the author with true Latin clarity presents his general conclusions, which are not unfavorable to industrial concentration. In a subsequent survey and in a more journalistic manner, the broad problem of industrial concentration is treated by Payen, E., Les Monopoles (Paris, 1920). Incorporated in Part 2 is an instructive sketch of French state, or fiscal, monopolies. The best work upon the concentration of industrial organization in Belgium is by Georges de Leener, L’Organization Syndicale de Chefs d’Industrie (Brussels, 1911). In this scholarly treatise covering the entire trend of modern industrialism toward concentration, over half of the first volume is given to a description of the cartel organization in various Belgian industries. No inclusive review of German experience with industrial monopolies has ever been attempted, but there is available a current month to month account of the operations and policies of cartels in all branches of German industry which provides a fund of information incomparably superior to any secondary sources upon the combination movement in other countries. The Kartell-Rundschau has been published regularly since 1903 under the continuous editorship of Dr. Siegfried Tschierschky. It need hardly be explained that the publication is devoted to the interests of the cartels, from which it derives its chief support.

For the review of the general historical development of monopolistic forms of industrial organization the outstand ing work to consult is that of J. Strieder, Studien zur Geschichte kapitalistischer Organisationsformen (Leipzig, 1914). Hardly less authoritative, but less comprehensive, is the illuminating monograph by Herman Levy, Monopoly and Competition (London, 1911), tracing monopolistic tendencies in English industrial evolution from the sixteenth century, and pointing out in the final chapter some interesting parallels and contrasts between the experience of England and Germany and the United States. Monopolies Past and Present, by J. E. Le Rossignol (New York, 1901) covers much the same field.

Special studies in separate fields treating of American experience are by no means as numerous as the rich prospects revealed by occasional short articles in the economic journals might lead one to expect.1 However, they include the detailed narrative of the History of the Standard Oil Company, by Ida M. Tarbell (1904); the more or less legalistic treatment, emphasizing financial aspects of the organization of The United States Steel Corporation, by Abraham Berglund (New York, 1907); and the judicious and scholarly work of Eliot R. Jones on The Anthracite Coal Combinations (Cambridge, 1914). Not primarily devoted to the study of the trusts within the given industries, but exhibiting clearly some of the causes and consequences of their formation, are: The Tin Plate Industry, by D. E. Dunbar (Boston, 1915); The Wool Industry, by P. T. Cherington (Chicago, 1916); and The American Wool Manufacture, Vol. II, by A. H. Cole (Cambridge, 1926). Without attempting to give a complete list of the intensive studies which have been made of the operations and policies of particular German cartels, we may indicate the wealth and range of this type of economic literature in Germany by reference to some of the more prominent studies of two or three important industries. The coal syndicates, the most conspicuous cartels in Germany, historically, have been the subject of much research as well as much controversy. Francis Walker’s Monopolistic Combinations in the German Coal Industry (New York, 1904) makes available in English a critical account of the early period, while W. Goetzke’s Das Rheinischwestfalische Kohlen Syndikate (Essen, 1904) covers the same ground from a more sympathetic angle. Under the same title Kurt Wiedenfeld (Bonn, 1912) published the results of a later study, which includes an account of the crucial controversy of 1910-11 over the question of “Imperial Participation,” or control, in this leading syndicate. The political controversy over the organization of the coal industry in 1911 was the forerunner of the warm debate during the war and the reconstruction period over the issue of nationalization of syndicated industries. Merely as casual examples of the mass of brochures on this subject which have helped to enliven the German political scene in recent years may be mentioned, Monopolfrage und Arbeiterklasse (4 essays), Wm. Jansson, editor (Berlin, 1917); and, on the opposite side, Für Reform der Industriekartelle (Berlin, 1920), and Das Problem der Staatlichen Kartellaufsichte (Mannheim, 1923), by Siegfried Tschierschky. How this sharpening of the issue and the inauguration of the new government policy of compulsory organization, or Zwangswirtschaft (for a few basic industries), have affected the cartells in the coal industry is shown in Die Zwangssyndikate in Kohlenbergbau, by Walter Thoenes (Jena, 1921). A recent addition to the list of scientific studies of the German coal cartels by an American author, A. H. Stockder, under the misleading title, German Trade Associations (New York, 1924), also reviews this later experience and analyzes the results of the new cartel policy. Special works of some merit treating of the experience with cartels in the potash industry, which was, so to speak, their original home, include: Die Deutsche Kaliindustrie und das Kalisyndikat, by Theodore Stoepel (Halle, 1904); Die Deutsche Kaliindustrie und das Kali Gesetze, by J. Schonemann (Hanover, 1911); Die Finanzierung das Kaliindustrie, by H. A. Giebel (Karlsruhe, 1912); and Das Kali, by Paul Kirche (Stuttgart, 1923). The latter work is partly technical. For the iron and steel industry, selection of but three or four outstanding studies from the considerable number which have appeared, without overlooking the historical significance of earlier researches, is even more difficult. The following, however, may be recommended for the present-day student, in preference to the largely superseded work of Mannstaedt and Zoellner: Beckman’s Der Zusammenschluss in der westdeutschen Grossindustrie (Cologne, 1921); H. Bruhn’s Der Eisenwirtschaftsbund (Jena, 1922); and A. Tross’s Der Aufbau der Eisen-und eisenverarbeitenden Industrie-Konzerne Deutschlands (Berlin, 1923). The latter contains a store of information on the present distribution of control in the industry.

The second main division of our classification of trust literature comprises, in addition to monographs of restricted compass surveying alternative public policies and the treatises still more limited in scope discussing current legal rules, a considerable number of textbooks providing a broad approach to, and usually a generalized “solution” of, the problem of industrial monopoly. To refer to the latter type of works first, it seems best to discuss them in the order of their relative emphasis upon the inductive or deductive method. Perhaps most noteworthy, because of its adherence to concrete facts and its empirical outlook, is J. W. Jenks’s The Trust Problem (New York, 1900). This standard text, after passing through a number of editions, was extensively revised in 1917 and published with W. E. Clark as co-author. It reflects throughout the exceptional opportunities for observation and statistical research of its original author, who was Secretary of the Industrial Commission. The digestive function here scarcely keeps pace with the foraging disposition, however. Business Organization and Combination, by Lewis H. Haney (New York, 1913), likewise is developed inductively, and the distinctive feature of the book is the attempt to connect the growth and special characteristics of monopolistic combinations with peculiarities of the corporate structure and the exigencies of corporation finance. The text by Eliot R. Jones under the title, The Trust Problem in the United States (New York, 1921), is the most comprehensive in scope, cautious in method, and sane in judgment of the general works in this field. Its prevailing conservatism is manifested not only in its substance, but in its form; none of the stock classifications, distinctions, or examples has been omitted. Besides intensive studies of six representative industrial combinations, there is an excellent survey in a short compass of the legal history of “the anti-trust movement.” For the reader who wishes an encyclopedic book of reference on the trust problem, either this text or that by Jenks and Clark should answer the purpose. A simple primer covering the more prominent aspects of the consolidation movement in America is J. F. Crowell’s Trusts and Competition (Chicago, 1915).

Two introductory studies of the trust movement in its initial stages, similar in general viewpoint and style, but different in respect of sharpness of perception and breadth of conception, are: Trusts, by E. L. Von Halle, (New York, 1895), and The Trusts and the Public, by George Gunton, (New York, 1899). These supply essentially journalistic descriptions of events and conditions surrounding the formation of trusts, and an explanation of their causes according to prevalent theories. Both were written from a strongly sympathetic point of view, the former primarily for foreign (German) consumption, the latter as a series of essays in apologetics. This “reporting” angle makes Von Halle’s book lucid and readable, while Gunton’s turn for anecdotes assured a wide audience for his articles. Neither possesses any permanent value as a contribution to the solution of the problem of industrial control. In the same category with these two volumes, except that it is developed from an opposite point of view is: The Plain Facts as to the Trusts and the Tariff, by G. L. Bolen (New York, 1902.)

The same verdict does not hold for E. S. Mead’s Trust Finance (New York, 1903), though it reflects a not unsympathetic attitude toward industrial combinations. The problem is interpreted almost exclusively in terms of the speculative evils of corporate promotion and capitalization. Data are assembled bearing upon fraud and chicanery in trust formation. Notwithstanding its one-sidedness, this text has its value in focusing attention on a sometimes neglected factor in the trust movement.

One of the earliest attempts at a circumspect analysis of the many phases of the monopoly problem is R. T. Ely’s Monopolies and Trusts (New York, 1900; ibid., 1906). In this pioneer work Professor Ely provided a sound background for more intensive studies of particular issues of social policy to which the growth of industrial monopolies has given rise. The historical perspective, the comparison and classification of different types of monopolistic organization, and the scientific method of approach distinguish this early classic. Of a not dissimilar stamp is J. B. Clark’s The Control of Trusts (New York, 1901), republished in 1912 with J. M. Clark as co-author. This excellent little text presents a closely reasoned analysis of the economic tendencies and legal situation responsible for the growth of trusts, and of the economic tendencies and legal reforms for which the growth of trusts is responsible. The clear statement of the limitations of competition, its advantages, and its necessary safeguards still bears critical examination, and for the reader who does not care for a more detailed treatment of the basic issues in public policy toward industrial organization this book should prove not only serviceable, but stimulating. A conservative, sane, and judicious book is E. D. Durand’s The Trust Problem (Cambridge, 1915).

For a concise and readable account of the socialist interpretation of the tendency toward industrial concentration, Herman Cahn’s Capital Today (New York, 1918) may be recommended. But the interested reader with two hours of spare time will not forego the opportunity to judge for himself the validity of the familiar predictions made by Karl Marx in Part VII of the first volume of his Das Kapital (Hamburg, 1885), American edition (Chicago, 1907), concerning the course of development of ever more inclusive forms of control in capitalistic industry.

Of foreign literature of the general type of the foregoing, it must suffice merely to mention a few outstanding works. The English contributions are meager, in any case. They include: D. H. MacGregor, Industrial Combination (London, 1906) (a deductive analysis, the abstract terms of which permit suggestive references and applications to trade unions and cooperative societies, as well as to different types of capitalistic groupings); G. R. Carter, Tendency Towards Industrial Combination (London, 1913) (a less scholarly but more pointed criticism of the consolidation movement); John Hilton, A Study of Trade Organizations and Combinations in the United Kingdom (London, 1919) (prepared for the Committee on Trusts of the Ministry of Reconstruction). Of the German treatises surveying and criticizing public policy toward industrial monopoly there must be mentioned before the many others Professor R. L. Liefmann’s Kartelle und Trusts (Stuttgart, 1910). This popular treatise has recently been revised and enlarged to cover post-war experience. It provides a useful classification of capitalistic unions, and an instructive analysis of the relation of the several forms to the special characteristics of different industries. In discussing the causes of the formation of capitalistic combinations and their consequences for the primary economic classes, stress is laid upon the tendencies to excess in free competition, on the one hand, and upon the efficacy of potential competition, on the other. This attitude is common among the majority of the German writers, and no doubt reflects in part the leniency of the established legal policy toward trade combinations. But the chief fault of the analysis is the failure to distinguish between the influence of prospective economies and of monopolistic opportunities in fostering industrial amalgamations. This failing, again, is shared by numerous German writers, who exhibit quite generally a certain disregard of the interests of consumers. Professor Liefmann’s article on Kartelle, in the Handwörterbuch der Staatswissenschaften, 4th ed., Vol. V (Jena, 1923), provides a useful short survey of the subject, together with a fairly full bibliography of the German literature. Other significant German treatises, illustrating in varying degrees the characteristics that have just been noted are: H. Mannstaedt, Ursachen und Ziele des Zusammenschlusses in Gewerbe (Jena, 1916); von Beckerath, Kräfte, Ziele und Gestaltungen in der Deutschen Industriewirtschaft (Jena, 1921); and R. Isay, Studien im privaten und öffentlichen Kartellrecht (Mannheim, 1922). The latter is more than the mere legal treatise its title might suggest.

Less concerned with the formulation of an ultimately and abstractly sound policy, and treating more particularly of the scope, meaning, and significance of actual public policy are a number of critical works written from the legal point of view, but not intended exclusively for a professional audience. Foremost among the monographs of this type stands Bruce Wyman’s The Control of the Market (Boston, 1911). Here is the most instructive and suggestive treatment within two covers of the legal doctrines developed in the common law for the regulation of trade and industry. There is also a searching criticism of the course of judicial interpretation of the Sherman Act. Incisive in analysis, circumspect in judgment, charming in style, this is a classic which no discerning reader can lay down without a regret that its scope should not have been broader.

Even narrower in compass, as is indicated by its title, is ex-President (now Chief Justice) Taft’s The Anti-Trust Act and the Supreme Court (New York, 1914). This little book might almost be described as a tract, for it was written in defense of its author’s record in the enforcement of the Sherman Act, as well as of the policy which that Act embodies. But it evinces a ripe familiarity with every step in the evolution of federal regulation of trade relations, a process in which the author as a judge has borne a distinguished part, bringing to the interpretation of the law both erudition and insight.

Business Competition and the Law, by G. H. Montague (New York, 1917), has more of an instructive purpose, and is therefore less critical. This collected series of articles is little more than a handbook for use in steering business men clear of the meshes of the anti-trust laws. An earlier exposition of the legal doctrines which govern industrial organization and commercial methods, and one written with a better grasp of the significance of their historical origin and development is T. C. Spelling’s Trusts and Monopolies (Boston, 1893). But for a purely legal compendium the reader will do better to refer to W. W. Thornton’s A Treatise on the Sherman Anti-Trust Act (Cincinnati, 1913), and to the encyclopaedic Trust Laws and Unfair Competition (United States Bureau of Corporations, Washington, 1916). Perhaps the most satisfactory treatment of the general law upon trade combinations, however, is A. M. Kales’s Contracts and Combinations in Restraint of Trade (Chicago, 1918). Here the traditional legal doctrines are expounded with rare force and insight.

More academic in tone than any of the foregoing, but exhibiting nevertheless a tenacious adherence to concreteness in method, is The Policy of the United States towards Industrial Monopoly, by O. W. Knauth (New York, 1914). The discussion of the development of the federal law upon trade regulation and the attitude of successive administrations toward its enforcement is characterized by sobriety of judgment and statement. The conflicts of opinion provoked by the anti-trust law and its interpretation are also carefully reviewed. The reader with a bent for historical inquiry will find an inviting problem presented respecting the origin of the Sherman Act, by a comparison of the Autobiography of George F. Hoar (New York, 1903), and the History of the Sherman Law, by A. H. Walker (New York, 1910).

The legal policies prevailing in foreign countries are so divergent that it is impracticable here to refer to works treating of the special features of each of these distinctive systems. One exception must be made, however. Not only because it has to do primarily with the legal principles governing industrial organization and trade relations in Australia, where the Government’s policy has been modeled on the American anti-trust policy, but also because of its own special qualities, mention must be made of W. Jethro Brown’s Prevention and Control of Monopoly (London, 1914). The author of this book is a distinguished jurist and an independent and clear-headed thinker. The book is an important contribution to the understanding of any anti-trust policy established upon common-law traditions.

In surveying the third principal division of the literature upon trusts or industrial monopolies, it is necessary to restrict attention to such works upon economic theory as deal primarily with the problem of monopoly. There is, of course, in most of the systematic treatises upon economic science some discussion of the nature and effects of monopoly. But as the antithesis of that perfect competition which is the foundation stone upon which the structure of classical economic theory has been reared, monopoly has, as a rule, come in for but scanty analysis in these texts. For example, in J. B. Clark’s The Distribution of Wealth (New York, 1900), there are but two casual references to monopoly, and one of these is in a footnote. Even Mill in the theoretical part of his Principles of Political Economy (5th edition, New York, 1894) devotes but a single page to the explanation of the determination of monopoly price and another page to the discussion of the influence of monopoly upon distribution. At best, in most of the well-known economics texts no more than one chapter is given to the treatment of monopoly problems, and that is usually limited to an exposition of the principle of monopoly value.

It is to the mathematical economists that one must go to collect the fragments of a comprehensive theory of value and distribution under monopolistic conditions.2 The mathematical method appears to lend itself readily to the analysis of market processes under the assumption of artificial manipulation. At any rate, the most significant contributions to this branch of economic theory have come from the mathematical school. The pioneer work of A. A. Cournot, Recherches sur les Principes Mathématiques de la Théorie des Richesses, first published in 1838 and translated for the “Economic Classics” series in 1897, remains an excellent introduction to the study of monopoly value. The employment of the methods of calculus brought a new technique into economic science, and by the device of superimposing demand and supply curves upon a single graph, Cournot opened the gateway to a fruitful field of scientific exploration. But he was not content with pointing the way, and except from the historical point of view these contributions are not what make the study of the Recherches most worth while to the present-day student.

Cournot employed his rigid mathematical methods in a lucid exposition of the effects of monopoly, under varying conditions as to costs, upon prices. He also analyzed, but not with so full a measure of success, the tendencies set up by partial monopoly, or limited competition,— an aspect of the general problem peculiarly significant for one interested in trusts and industrial combinations.3

Not all the mathematical economists have followed Cournot’s lead in setting out to construct a complete theory of value by proceeding from conditions of monopoly and working toward the purely competitive market by a gradual modification of hypotheses. The Lausanne school, so-called, developed the theory of exchanges, after the classical manner, under assumptions of free competition; but this approach has not prevented them from making some acute observations regarding the effects upon economic equilibria of monopolistic influences. Leon Walras, the founder of this group, in his Éléments d’Économie Politique Pure (Lausanne, 1889), developed the theory of general economic equilibrium. The study of monopoly has also been significantly advanced by Professor Pareto, the successor of Professor Walras, in his systematic treatises, Cours d’Économie politique (Lausanne, 1897), and Manuel d’Economie politique, (Paris, 1909). For a clear summary and a just appreciation of the contributions of the Lausanne school to economic theory, one should consult E. Antonelli, Principes d’Économie pure (Paris, 1914). A more critical review of the work of this school, as well as of the mathematical method in economics in general, will be found in W. E. Zawadski, Les Mathématiques appliquées à l’Économie politique (Paris, 1914). Outside of the Lausanne school, which is more than half French itself, the leading French representative of the mathematical method has been Professor E. Colson, and his comprehensive Cours d’Économie politique, in six volumes (Paris, 1901-07), will be found to contain some of the most precise and ingenious demonstrations of the consequences of monopolistic price-making under varying conditions. In particular Volume I, pp. 141-201, and Volume VI, pp. 11- 54, may be recommended.

Probably, however, the most searching analyses of the problems surrounding monopolistic price determination, including its relation to wealth distribution and social welfare, in the last two generations have been made by English mathematical economists. The work of two of the three most prominent of these contributors to an economic theory of monopoly is well summed up in their books, but the contributions of the third found expression almost exclusively in journal articles. Professor Edgeworth’s prefatory Mathematical Physics (London, 1881) called attention to the interesting possibilities in an economic analysis of the operation of combinations in various spheres: the determinateness of the transactions in which they participated, the significance of the reduction in the number of exchange relationships, and the advantages and limitations of concert of action in the market. These questions and similar ones have been minutely examined in subsequent writings, more especially with reference to ordinary commercial transactions in a series of three articles on La Teoria Pura del Monopolio in the Giornali degli Economisti, 1897 (Volume XV, 2d Series, pp. 13, 307, 405), and with reference to the particular case of diminishing cost industries and the attendant power of discrimination, in Contributions to the Theory of Railway Rates, four articles in the Economic Journal (1911-13, Volume XXI, p. 346, p. 55; Volume XXII, p. 198; Volume XXIII, p. 206). It is fortunate that these and other scattered papers of Professor Edgeworth have now been brought together and the articles on the “Pure Theory of Monopoly” retranslated into English. In his complete economic writings, Papers Relating to Political Economy (London, 1925), the articles referred to above will be found, respectively, in Volume I, pp. 111-42, and in the same volume, pp. 61-99 and pp. 172- 91.

The second of the triumvirate referred to has accomplished, better perhaps than any of the other mathematical economists, the difficult task of interpreting clearly and untechnically the results and significance of analyses that necessarily involved types of reasoning that are essentially mathematical. Alfred Marshall, in his Principles of Economics (8th edition, New York, 1920), has done far more than to interpret the contributions of other minds, however, and not less than elsewhere in the sections dealing with monopoly and its incidents. The fifth Book of his Principles, Chapters 8, 9, 12, 13, and 14, cannot be overlooked by any student desiring the minimum essentials of an acquaintance with the literature of trusts and monopolies. The scrupulous faithfulness of the late dean of English-speaking economists in adhering to the rigid premises of his argument when treating of the theoretical implications of monopoly, no less than in other parts of his work, combined with his extraordinary grasp of the limitations of those premises and their relation to the complexities of actual affairs, enabled him to penetrate many obscure compartments and fissures in the economic structure without losing his way. And the reader, if he watches all the sign-posts, can follow him without difficulty. In particular, Marshall explains the relation of various cost tendencies to the development of monopoly, and studies the effects upon the general welfare of the operation of monopoly under varying conditions, natural and imposed.

Finally, the successor of Professor Marshall, both academically and professionally, Professor A. C. Pigou, has given us, in The Economics of Welfare (2d ed., London, 1924), the best all-around account anywhere obtainable of the economic significance of monopoly and of the feasibility of the different means of its regulation in the public interest. The present writer’s indebtedness to this source and to Professor Pigou’s previous volume, Wealth and Welfare (London, 1912), which may be taken as a preliminary edition of The Economics of Welfare, is so patent in the sixth chapter of this monograph that it will not need more than formal acknowledgment here. The relationship is cited here mainly that the reader may gauge better the importance attached to Professor Pigou’s notable achievements in this branch of economic theory.

A compact but rather difficult mathematical summary of some of the more important results reached by Edgeworth, Marshall, Pigou, Pareto, and others is given by Professor A. L. Bowley in his Mathematical Groundwork of Economics (Oxford, 1924).

The contributions of American economists in this difficult field of economic analysis have not been especially conspicuous. For a cautious but very elementary treatment of the problem of monopoly value, the student will find helpful the exposition of the authors of Outlines of Economics, R. T. Ely and associates (New York, revised edition, 1920).

At the moment of going to press, there has just appeared an important series of monographs on cartels and combines, prepared under the direction of the Economic and Financial Section of the League of Nations (Geneva, 1927) for submission to the International Economic Conference of May, 1927. Only the briefest mention of these documents is possible in the circumstances. The one presenting the most acute analysis and the most realistic interpretation of the movement toward comprehensive industrial control is Professor Kurt Wiedenfeld’s Cartels and Combines. A healthy skepticism is evinced by Professor D. H. MacGregor in his very brief treatment of International Cartels. Professor Gustav Cassel takes advantage of the opportunity in a tract upon Recent Monopolistic Tendencies in Industry and Trade, not only to point out the similarities between trade unions and business confederations and amalgamations, but also to exhibit a personal bias, as it appears, by magnifying the economic evils set in train by the former and minimizing even the potentialities of abuse in the latter. The thesis taken by Professor Paul de Rousiers in his Cartels and Trusts and Their Development is that “Industrial agreements between producers are the outcome of economic necessity, bound up with existing conditions of production and distribution.” But as the author does not himself maintain this standpoint throughout the essay, his readers are not likely to be convinced. Still less convincing are a number of the other papers in which logic has been thrown overboard altogether and dissimulation given the job of pilot. These need not be cited. It is enough to note that under the euphemistic slogan of “Economic Rationalization,” which to some means a prudent direction of affairs and to others rationing, or plain division of the spoils, a movement is under way in Europe to smooth the way for supernational industrial control. In some cases this might mean the extension of monopolistic influences over wider spheres, but more frequently probably only the entrenchment of existing privileges within particular national spheres. Several of the documents under review appear to have been designed to lend impetus to this movement.

Notes

1 Vide, on the paper industry, articles by H.R. Hess, 25 Quarterly Journal of Economics, 650 (1911), E. O. Merchant, 32 Quarterly Journal of Economics, 238 (1918), and 34 Quarterly Journal of Economics, 313 (1920), Constance Southworth, 30 Journal of Political Economy, 681 (1922); on the gunpowder industry, an article by W. H. S. Stevens, 26 Quarterly Journal of Economics, 444 (1912); on the iron and steel industry, articles by E. S. Mead, 22 Quarterly Journal of Economics, 452 (1908); A. Berglund, 38 Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1, and 607 (1923-24); on the woolen industry, articles by L. D. H. Weld, 27 Quarterly Journal of Economics, 67 (1912), A. H. Cole, 37 Quarterly Journal of Economics, 436 (1923); and on the shoe machinery industry, articles by R. Roe, 21 Journal of Political Economy, 938 (1913), and 22 Journal of Political Economy, 43 (1914).

2 This phrase is used hero and elsewhere to comprehend conditions of quasi-monopoly as well as monopoly in the strict sense.

3 While the mathematical method does not appear, in general, to have made strong appeal to German economists, this particular aspect of the problem of monopoly has been further developed by Karl Forchheimer in an article in Schmoller’s Jahrbuch, vol. xxxii, p. 1, “Theoretisches zum unvollständigen Monopole.”

 

Image Source: National Archives and Records Administration. United States, Selective Service System. Selective Service Registration Cards, World War II: Fourth Registration. Records of the Selective Service System, Record Group Number 147. World War II Draft Cards (Fourth Registration) for the State of Maryland. State Headquarters ca. 1942. NARA Publication: M1939. NAI: 563727. The National Archives at St. Louis, Missouri. U.S.A.

Categories
Chicago Fields

Chicago. Economics Ph.D. program, switch to field exams. 1919.

The brief memo transcribed for today’s posting indicates at least a desire and perhaps indeed first steps to moving graduate education in economics at the University of Chicago away from a course credit orientation (i.e. “majors”) to one based upon examination in aggregates of “fields or subjects”. The memo’s author, James Alfred Field, taught courses on population and vital statistics.

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James Alfred Field (1880-1927).

A.B., Harvard (1903); graduate student, Harvard (1903-6); University of Berlin, 1905-06; Assistant/Teaching Fellow in Economics, Harvard (1903-5); Instructor in Economics Harvard/Radcliffe (1906-08).

Instructor 1908-10, Assistant Professor (1910-13), Associate Professor (1913-1918), Professor (1918-1927) at University of Chicago.

Source: University of Chicago. Annual Register, 1909-1910 .p. 45.

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The University of Chicago
The School of Commerce and Administration

Memorandum to Graduate Committee from J. A. Field

December 8, 1919

The Committee on Graduate Students in the Department of Political Economy will meet on Thursday, December 11, at 4:00 o’clock, in Cobb 6 B, to begin the discussion of proposed reforms in the methods of graduate instruction and in the requirements and examinations for the doctor’s degree.

It is proposed, in general, that advanced students who have shown evidence of their qualification be exempted, as far as is practicable, from the routine demands of separate courses, and be assisted and encouraged to organize their studies in significant groups or special fields, with increased opportunities for independent reading and inquiry. Accordingly, it is suggested that the requirements for the doctor’s degree be formulated in terms not of majors, but of fields or subjects, and that the method of examination be correspondingly revised.

The discussion on December 11 will deal particularly with the practical problems of defining suitable fields or groups of studies, and of guiding and testing independent individual work in these fields.

 

J. A. Field

 

Source: University of Chicago Archives. Department of Economics. Records. Box 22, Folder 7.

Image Source: University of Chicago Photographic Archive, apf1-06081, Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library.

 

Categories
Economists Fields Harvard

Harvard. Thirteen Ph.D. Examinees, 1915-16

For thirteen Harvard economics Ph.D. candidates this posting provides information about their respective academic backgrounds, the six subjects of their general examinations along with the names of the examiners, the subject of their special subject, thesis subject and advisor(s) (where available). Of particular note are the records for Harvard historian of early economic thought, Arthur Eli Monroe, and the soon to become distinguished Chicago (later Princeton) economist, Jacob Viner.

________________________________________

 

DIVISION OF HISTORY, GOVERNMENT, AND ECONOMICS
EXAMINATIONS FOR THE DEGREE OF PH.D.
1915-16

Notice of hour and place will be sent out three days in advance of each examination.
The hour will ordinarily be 4 p.m.

 

Arthur Eli Monroe.

General Examination in Economics, Wednesday, October 13, 1915.
Committee: Professors Bullock (chairman), Taussig, Gay, Day, and Holcombe.
Academic History: Harvard College, 1904-08; Harvard Graduate School, 1913-February, 1916. A.B., Harvard, 1908; A. M., ibid., 1914. Teacher of Latin and German, Kent School, Connecticut, 1909-13; Assistant in Economics, Harvard, 1914-February, 1916; Tutor in the Division of History, Government, and Economics, 1915-February, 1916; Instructor I Economics, Williams College, February, 1916-.
General Subjects: 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. Economic History since 1750. 3. Public Finance. 4. Statistical Method and its Application. 5. History of Political Theory. 6. Topic in the History of Economic Thought.
Special Subject: Some topic in the History of American Economic Thought.

 

Merton Kirk Cameron.

General Examination in Economics, Wednesday, November 17, 1915.
Committee: Professors Gay (chairman), Ripley, Taussig, Anderson, and Day.
Academic History: Princeton University, 1904-08; Harvard Graduate School, 1913-. A.B., Princeton, 1908; A. M., Harvard, 1914. Head of Department of History, Lanier High School, Montgomery, Alabama, 1911-13; Assistant in Economics, Harvard, 1915-.
General Subjects: 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. Economic History since 1750. 3. Money, Banking, and Crises. 4. Transportation. 5. Economics of Corporations. 6. American History.
Special Subject: Economic History of the United States.
Thesis Subject: “The History of the Tobacco Growing Industry in the United States.” (With Professor E. F. Gay.)

 

Herbert Knight Dennis

General Examination in Economics, Tuesday, February 29, 1916.
Committee: Professors Bullock (chairman), Perry, Tozzer, Ford, Foerster, and Anderson.
Academic History: Allegheny College, 1907-08; Brown University, 1910-12; Princeton University, 1912-14; Harvard Graduate School, 1914-. Ph.B., Brown, 1912; A. M., Princeton, 1914; A.M. Harvard, 1915.
General Subjects: 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. Ethical Theory and its History. 3. Poor Relief. 4. Social Reforms. 5. Sociology. 6. Anthropology.
Special Subject: Social Psychology.Thesis Subject: “The French Canadians—A Study in Race Psychology.” (With Professor Foerster.)

 

James Washington Bell.

General Examination in Economics, Wednesday, May 3, 1916.
Committee: Professors Bullock (chairman), Ripley, Munro, Anderson, and Copeland.
Academic History: University of Colorado, 1908-14; Harvard Graduate School, 1914-. A.B., Colorado, 1912; A.M., ibid., 1913. Assistant in Economics, University of Colorado, 1912-14.
General Subjects: 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. Economic History since 1750. 3. Public Finance. 4. Labor Problems. 5. Sociology. 6. Municipal Government.
Special Subject: Public Finance.
Thesis Subject: “Taxation of Railroads in New England.” (With Professor Bullock.)

 

William Burke Belknap.

General Examination in Economics, Thursday, May 4, 1916.
Committee: Professors Bullock (chairman), Gay, Ripley, Anderson, and Dr. Morison.
Academic History: Yale College, 1904-08; University of Chicago, 1913-14 (two terms); Haverad Graduate School, 1914-. A.V., Yale, 1908; A.M. Harvard, 1915.
General Subjects: 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. Economic History since 1750. 3. Labor Problems. 4. Money and Banking. 5. American History since 1789. 6. Public Finance.
Special Subject: Public Finance.
Thesis Subject: “History of the State Finances of Kentucky.” (With Professor Bullock.)

 

Henry Bass Hall.

General Examination in Economics, Friday, May 5, 1916.
Committee: Professors Gay (chairman), Taussig, Turner, Day, and Anderson.
Academic History: Harvard College, 1904-05; Amherst College, 1906-07; Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1911-12; Harvard Graduate School, 1912-. S.B., Massachusetts Agricultural College, 1912.
General Subjects: 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. Money and Banking. 3. International Trade. 4. Economic History since 1750. 5. Agricultural Economics. 6. American History since 1789.
Special Subject: Agricultural Economics.
Thesis Subject: “Economic History of Massachusetts Agriculture.” (With Professors Carver and Gay.)

 

Charles Cloyd Creekpaum.

General Examination in Economics, Monday, May 8, 1916.
Committee: Professors Bullock (chairman), Day, Anderson, Copeland, and Holcombe.
Academic History: University of Nebraska, 1908-12; Harvard Graduate School, 1914-. A. B., Nebraska, 1912. Principal of High School, Alvo, Nebraska, 1912-13; Principal of High School, McCool Junction, Nebraska, 1913-14.
General Subjects: 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. Economic History since 1750. 3. Sociology. 4. Statistics. 5. History of Political Theory. 6. Public Finance.
Special Subject: Public Finance.
Thesis Subject: “the Financial Results of Public Ownership of Railways.” (With Professor Bullock.)

 

Mark Anson Smith.

General Examination in Economics, Thursday, May 11, 1916.
Committee: Professors Bullock (chairman), Hart, Gay, Ripley, and Dr. Davis.
Academic History: Dartmouth College, 1906-10; University of Wisconsin, 1911-14; Harvard Graduate School, 1914-. A.B., Dartmouth, 1910; A.M., Wisconsin, 1913.
General Subjects: 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. Economic History since 1750. 3. Money and Banking. 4. Economics of Corporations. 5. Public Finance. 6. American Government and Constitutional Law.
Special Subject: Public Finance.

 

John Emmett Kirshman.

General Examination in Economics, Friday, May 12, 1916.
Committee: Professors Bullock (chairman), Ripley, Gay, Munro, and Foerster.
Academic History: Central Wesleyan College, 1901-04; Syracuse University, 1907-08; University of Wisconsin, 1908-09; University of Illinois, 1914-15; Harvard Graduate School, 1915-. Ph.B., Central Wesleyan, 1904; Ph.M. Syracuse, 1908. Assistant Professor of History, North Dakota Agricultural College, 1909-14; Teaching Fellow in Economics, University of Illinois, 1914-15.
General Subjects: 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. Public Finance. 3. Economic History since 1750. 4. Comparative Modern Government. 5. Economics of Corporations. 6. Socialism and Social Reform.
Special Subject: Public Finance
Thesis Subject: “Taxation of Banking Institutions.” (With Professor Bullock)

 

Zenas Clark Dickinson.

General Examination in Economics, Monday, May 15, 1916.
Committee: Professors Taussig (chairman), Gay, Yerkes, Day, and Dr. Burbank
Academic History: University of Nebraska, 1910-14; Harvard Graduate School, 1914-. A.B., Nebraska, 1914.
General Subjects: 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. Economic History since 1750. 3. Statistical Method and its Application. 4. Public Finance. 5. Psychology. 6. Suitable Field in Economic Theory and its History, with special reference to Psychology.
Special Subject: Suitable Field in Economic Theory.

 

Arthur Harrison Cole.

Special Examination in Economics, Thursday, May 18, 1916.
Committee:
General Examination passed January 7, 1915.
Academic History: Bowdoin College, 1907-11; Harvard Graduate School, 1911-. A.B., Bowdoin, 1911; A.M., Harvard, 1913. Assistant in Economics, Harvard, 1913
General Subjects: 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. Economic History since 1750. 3. Money, Banking, and Commercial Crises. 4. Public Finance and Financial History. 5. International Trade and Tariff History. 6. Political and Constitutional History of the United States.
Special Subject: Economic History of the United States.
Committee: Professors Gay (chairman), Taussig, Turner, and Sprague.
Thesis Subject
: “History of the Wool Manufacturing Industry in the United States, to the year 1830.” (With Professors Gay and Taussig.)
Committee on Thesis: Professors Gay, Taussig, and Sprague.

 

Jacob Viner

General Examination in Economics, Friday, May 19, 1916.
Committee: Professors Taussig (chairman), Bullock, R. B. Perry, Anderson, and Gras.
Academic History: McGill University, Montreal, 1911-14; Harvard Graduate School, 1914-. A.B., McGill. 1914; A.M., Harvard, 1915.
General Subjects: 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. International Trade. 3. Public Finance. 4. Sociology. 5. Economic History since 1750. 6. Theory of Value (Philosophy).
Special Subject: International Trade.
Thesis Subject: “International Balance of Payments” (With Professor Taussig)

 

Percy Gamble Kammerer.

Special Examination in Economics, Monday, May 22, 1916.
General Examination passed May 14, 1914.
Academic History: Harvard College, 1904-06, 1910-12; Harvard Graduate School, 1912-. A. B., 1908 (1913).
General Subjects: : 1. Economic Theory and its History. 2. Ethical Theory. 3. Poor Relief. 4. Social Reforms. 5. Sociology. 6. The Labor Question.
Special Subject: The Family considered Historically and in its Relation to Social Institutions.
Committee: Professors Foerster (chairman), Ripley, Feguson, Tozzer, Ford, and Anderson.
Thesis Subject: “The Unmarried Mother: a Study of Case Histories.” (With Professor Foerster.)
Committee on Thesis: Professors Foerster, Taussig, and Dearborn.

 

Source: Harvard University Archives. Harvard University, Examinations for the Ph.D. (HUC 7000.70), Folder “Examinations for the Ph.D., 1915-1916”.

Image Source: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. Digital ID:  cph 3c14486

Categories
Columbia Fields Harvard Suggested Reading

Harvard. Reading List in Public Finance. Bullock and Burbank, 1934.

In an earlier posting I posted the public finance reading list for the Ph.D. field exam in public finance prepared some time during the fall semester 1933-34 which was in a Harvard economics department folder along with reading lists for other fields (railroads, corporations, and banking). In this posting we find the identical reading list along with a cover letter from Professor Charles Bullock of Harvard to Prof. Haig, the public finance expert, at Columbia asking for comments. I have added Haig’s suggestions for deletions and additions in blue-boldface.

___________________________________

[Bullock to Haig, 15 January 1934]

HARVARD UNIVERSITY
DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS
January 15, 1934

Prof. R. M. Haig
Columbia University
New York City

My dear Haig:

Burbank and I have been conferring recently about the reading that ought to be done by our graduate students who offer public finance as their special field for the doctorate. After considering books and the results students apparently get from reading them, we have got up the enclosed list. If you would be interested in reading it and commented commenting upon it, I should be greatly indebted to you.

In particular I would be glad to have you note any books which you have found useful for your students but which we have omitted.

Some of the books we list, like Miss Comstock’s “Taxation in the Modern State”, are pretty light-weight affairs; but they have some information in them which students can’t readily get elsewhere; also, of course, some misinformation.

If there are any books listed here that you would strike out, I should be very glad if you would indicate deletions.

Another question is that of the division of the books into the three groups. The first group mostly is intended to give the general approach, though the last thing in it, the Colwyn Report, is put there because Burbank has found it extremely useful with his students. Mine have not found it so useful; and I would have preferred to put that title in Group II.

I would be glad to have your comments also on the amount of reading. I am inclined to think the requirement of all the books in Group I, six or eight books in Group II, and three or four books in Group III is excessive; but the first two titles in Group I are really read in class. Do you think the total amount of reading excessive?

For your convenience I am sending along two copies, so that you can jot down in lead pencil on one of them additions, deletions, criticisms, and any other comment, and then mail the damned thing back to me without even going to the trouble of dictating a letter. In the present state of the literature in public finance, I have found it very difficult to know what to do; and so has Burbank. Perhaps you may be sufficiently in the same frame of mind so that you will not find this polite request I make too much of an imposition!

Yours sincerely,

[signed]

Charles J. Bullock

 

CJB/AMB

___________________________________

Readings in Public Finance for General and Special Examinations

Students preparing for the special examination in public finance should read all the references listed under I. In II the student should read a substantial portion of six or eight books, selecting topics which he considers of most interest and value to him. In III the student should read a substantial portion of three or four of the books listed, again following his own requirements or interests.

 

I. Required Reading

A. Smith Wealth of Nations, Book 5
J. S. Mill Principles of Political Economy, Book 5, ch. 1-8
C. F. Bastable Public Finance (3rd edition). Read pages: 1-149; 153-257; 261-421; 425-442; 443-464; 465-468; 469-494; 504-573; 611-711.
H. L. Lutz Public Finance
C. J. Bullock Selected Readings in Public Finance (3rd edition). Read pages: 1-51; 76-147; 156-268; 278-379; 445-490; 533-607; 755-902; 921-982
A. Wagner Finanzwissenschaft, Vol. II. Read all the coarse print; use judgment on the fine print.
P. Leroy-Beaulieu Traité des Finances, Vol. I (8th edition, 1912). Read pages: 1-10; 28-92; 92-133; 134-143; 172-249; 367-387; 394-437; 439-482; 483-517; 539-626; 626-703
[Haig note: Substitute Allix]
D. R. Dewey Financial History of the United States
The Colwyn Report Great Britain: Report of the Committee on National Debt and Taxation, 1927. Read pages: 73-244. (Cmd. 2800; Econ. 5389.27)

[Haig note: Add.—H. Dalton—Principles of Public Finance]

 

 

II. Reading Recommended

Mills and Starr Readings in Public Finance and Taxation. Read Pages: 41-150; 168-195; 205-264; 369-453; 482-607; 763-808
A. C. Pigou A Study in Public Finance
B. Moll Lehrbuch der Finanzwissenschaft (1930)
[Haig note: I was surprised by the low rating given Moll’s Lehrbuch by his German colleagues]
E. Allix

 

Traité élementaire de Science des Finances (6th edition, 1931). Read pages: 1-81; 151-204; 216-256; 285-312; 341-382; 437-573; 870-902; 910-958; 1011-1050;1091-1134.
L. Suret Théorie de l’Impôt progressif
[Haig note: Subsitute Seligman]
J. Stamp Fundamental Principles of Taxation
T. G. Shearman Natural Taxation
[Haig note: “?” (a question mark)]
H. L. Lutz State Tax Commissions
S. Leland The Classified Property Tax
A. L. Harding Double Taxation of Property and Income
E. Cannan History of Local Rates
A. F. Macdonald Federal Aid
J. W. Grice National and Local Finance
A. E. Buck Municipal Finance
The May Report Great Britain: Report of the Committee on National Expenditure, 1931 (Cmd. 3290; Econ. 5389.31)
National Tax Association Proceedings, 1933, Report of Committee on Model System of State and Local Taxation

 

 

III. Other Reading

G. F. Shirras Science of Public Finance
[Haig note: Elim. in view of incl. of Bastable]
E. R. A. Seligman Progressive Taxation
——————— Essays in Taxation
——————— Income Tax (chapters on Great Britain, Germany, France, U.S.A.)
——————— Shifting and Incidence of Taxation
H. A. Silverman Taxation, Its Incidence and Effects
A. Comstock Taxation in the Modern State
J. P. Jensen Property Taxation in the United States
W. G. Schultz Taxation of Inheritances
R. G. Blakey Taxation in Minnesota
[Haig note: Eliminate]
R. M. Haig The Taxation of Excess Profits in Great Britain
National Industrial Conference Board General Sales or Turnover Taxation
National Industrial Conference Board Sales Tax
A. G. Buehler General Sales Taxes
[Haig note: Substitute C. Shoup: Sales Tax in France]
R. Magill, editor Lectures on Taxation
R. Stourm The Budget
W. F. Willoughby The National Budget System
H. S. Adams
[Haig note: “C” (i.e. not S.)]
Public Debts
M. L. Walker Municipal Expenditure
Britain’s Industrial Future, pp. 426-447.
H.U. Library, Econ 6069.28.5
Joseph Sykes British Public Expenditures, 1921-1931
Report of New York Commission for Revision of the Tax Laws, 1932, Part III.

[Haig note:  Add.

W. F. Willoughby. The Financial Condition and Operations of the National Government.
H. C. Adams, Science of Finance.
H. Higgs. The Financial System of the UK.
Taxation of Foreign and National Enterprises. Fiscal Commission, League of Nations.]

 

Source:   Columbia University Libraries, Manuscript Collections. R. M. Haig Collection, Box 15, “Lecture Notes”; Folder, “Reading—Suggestions—Econ.101”.

Image Source:  Harvard Album 1932.

Categories
Economic History Fields Harvard Suggested Reading Syllabus

Harvard. Modern Economic History Seminar. Usher, 1937-41

For the seminar “Topics in Modern Economic History” taught by Abbott Payson Usher (1883-1965) at Harvard, I have been able to find syllabi from the fall term of 1937-38 and both terms for 1938-39 and 1940-41 which, judging from the enrollment figures reported in the annual president’s report, were the only years the seminar with Usher (alone) had actually taken place. Only after the Second World War do we see a seminar with this title having student enrollment figures reported (Usher and Walt Rostow in 1947-48 and then Usher and Gerschenkron in 1948-49.

_____________________________________________

Economics 136 (formerly 22).
Seminar.
Topics in Modern Economic History

Two consecutive hours a week, to be arranged. Professor Usher.

Source: Announcement of the Courses of Instruction offered by the Faculty of Arts and Sciences during 1937—38 (First edition). Official Register of Harvard University, Vol. 34, No. 5 (March 1, 1937), p. 149.

_____________________________________________

Enrollments in the seminar:
Topics in Modern Economic History
1937/38-1940/41

1937-38.

[Economics] 136. (formerly 22). Professor Usher.—Seminar. Topics in Modern Economic History

7 Graduates. Total 7.

 

1938-39.

[Economics] 136. Professor Usher.—Seminar. Topics in Modern Economic History

9 Graduates, 1 Senior. Total 10

 

1939-40.

[not offered]

 

1940-41.

[Economics] 136. Professor Usher.—Seminar. Topics in Modern Economic History

9 Graduates, 1 Senior. Total 10

 

Source: Harvard University. Reports of the President, 1937-38, p. 86; 1938-39, p. 99; 1940-41, p. 59.

_____________________________________________

 

[Seminar.
Topics in Modern Economic History.
A. P. Usher]

 

Calendar
Economics 136
First Term

1937-38

  1. Oct. 7.     Schools of Economic Historians.
  2. Oct. 18.   Sombart and the Ideal Type Method
  3. Nov. 5.    History as a genetic science.
  4. Nov. 19.  Historical Process: evolution or fluctuation
  5. Dec. 3.    A Pluralistic Concept of Social Evolution
  6. Dec. 17.  The Historical Significance of Locational Theory.
  7. Jan. 7     Autarchy as an objective of economic policy.

Suggested Reading

  1. Gras, N. S. B. The Rise and Development of Economic History, The Economic History Review, I, pp. 12-34.
  2. Parsons, T. Capitalism in Recent German Literature, Journal of Political Economy, vol 36, pp, 641-661; vol. 37, pp. 31-51.
  3. Sée, H. Science et Philosophie de l’histoire, pp. 116-156, 228-233.
    or
    Rickert, H. Die Grenzen der naturwissenschaftlichen Begriffsbildung, 1902, pp. 1-29, 289-304; 1913, 1-29, 256-273; 1921, pp. 1-23, 215-230.
  4. Tarde, G. Social Laws, pp. 1-67.
  5. Tarde, G. Social Laws, pp, 144-213.
    or Ogburn, W. F. Social Change, 1923. pp. 56-145.
  6. Weber, Alfred. Theory of the Location of Industries.
    Hoover, E. M. Jr. Location Theory of the Shoe and Leather Industries.
  7. Heckscher, E.F. Mercantilism, I, pp. 19-44, II, pp. 13-52.

 

Source: Harvard University Archives. Syllabi, course outlines and reading lists in Economics, 1895-2003 (HUC 8522.2.1), Box 2, Folder 1937-1938.

_____________________________________________

[1938-39 Seminar:
Topics in Modern Economic History,
A. P. Usher]

Economics 136
Reading on General Seminar Topics.

I. Schools of Economic Historians.            Oct. 4.

Gras, N. S. B. The Rise and Development of Economic History, The Economic History Review, I, pp. 12-34.
Gide, C. and Rist, C. History of Economic Thought, chapters on the historical school.

II. Sombart and the Ideal Type Method. Oct. 18.

Parsons, T. Capitalism in Recent German Literature, Journal of Political Economy, vol 36, pp. 641-661; vol. 37, pp. 31-51.

III. History as a Genetic Science    Nov. 1.

Sée, H. Science et Philosophie de l’histoire, pp. 116-156, 228-233.
or
Rickert, H. Die Grenzen der naturwissenschaftlichen Begriffsbildung, ed. 1902, pp. 1-29, 289-304; ed. 1913, 1-29, 256-273; ed. 1921, pp. 1-23, 215-230.

IV. Historical Process, evolution or fluctuation? Nov. 15.

Tarde, G. Social Laws, pp. 1-67.
Sorokin, P. Social Dynamics, I, chap. IV; vol II, ch. X.

V. A Pluralistic Concept of Social Evolution.       Nov. 29.

Tarde, G. Social Laws, pp, 144-213.
or Ogburn, W. F. Social Change (1923) pp. 56-145.

VI. Autarchy as an objective of Social Policy.      Dec. 6.

Heckscher, E.F. Mercantilism, I, pp. 19-44, II, pp. 13-52.

VII. The origin and development of liberalism. Dec. 30.

Allen, J.W. A History of Political Thought in the Sixteenth Century, (11928) Part II, ch. III; Part III, ch. VIII.
Hobhouse, L.T. Liberalism. Selections at discretion

*   *   *  *   *

[“2nd Term” in pencil]
Economics 136
1938-39

A final examination will be scheduled, consisting of an essay prepared prior to the examination upon any one of the topics listed below.

No student will be responsible for more material than is presented by the titles suggested under the various topics. Relevant material will be selected from the titles listed.

1. The significance of the scientific method for economic history.

Whitehead, A. N.       The Function of Reason,
___________________          Science and the Modern World.
___________________          The Concept of Nature.
Sée, H.            Science et Philosophie de l’histoire.

2. The problem of novelty in the theory of social evolution.

Bergson, H.    Creative Evolution.
Tarde, G.        La Logique Sociale.
___________         Social Laws.
___________         L’invention considerée comme moteur de l’evolution sociale.
Usher, A. P.    A History of Mechanical Inventions.

3. Pluralism and multilinear concepts of social evolution.

James. W.       Pluralism.
Tarde, G.        Social Laws.
___________         La Logique Sociale.
Ogburn, W. F.            Social Change.

4. The Process of Innovation.

Koffka, K.       The Growth of the Mind.
Gilfillan, S.C.   The Sociology of Invention.
Rossman, J.    The Psychology of the Inventor.
Usher, A.P.     A History of Mechanical Inventions.

5. Logical Problems of the Genetic Sciences.

Baldwin, J.M. Development and Evolution.
Rickert, H.      Die Grenzen der naturwissenschaftlichen Begriffsbildung.

6. The concept of industrial evolution.

Bücher, K. Industrial Evolution

7. The Ideal Type Method and the Theory of Social Evolution

Parsons, T. Capitalism in Recent German Literature, Journal of Political Economy, vol. 36, 641-661; 37, 31-51.
Nussbaum, F.L. A History of the Economic Institutions of Modern Europe.
or
Weber, M. General Economic History.

8. Karl Marx and the Materialistic Interpretation of History.

Bober, M. Karl Marx’s Interpretation of History.
Sée, H. The Economic Interpretation of History.

9. The Concept of Capitalism as a basis for the interpretation of modern economic history.

any one of the following texts:
Hobson, J.A.    The Evolution of Modern Capitalism.
Sée, H.           Modern Capitalism.
Hammond, J. L. and Barbara. The Rise of Modern Industry.
Bober, M. Karl Marx’s Interpretation of History.

 

Source: Harvard University Archives. Syllabi, course outlines and reading lists in Economics, 1895-2003 (HUC 8522.2.1), Box 2, Folder 1938-1939.

_____________________________________________

[1940-41 Seminar:
Topics in Modern Economic History,
A. P. Usher]

Economics 136
1940 – 1941

Calendar

  1. Oct. 3.    The Development of Economic History.
  2. Oct. 17.  Werner Sombart and Max Weber as exponents of the ideal type method
  3. Oct. 31.  History as a genetic science.
  4. Nov. 14. The Nature of Historical Process.
  5. Dec. 5.    A Pluralistic Concept of Social Evolution
  6. Dec. 19.  Mercantilism.

Reading

There will be an examination at Mid-year consisting of a three hour essay prepared on some topic drawn from, or related to, the work of the general meetings of the class. Readings suggested as preparation for class discussion will not in all instances serve as an adequate basis for the examination essay. A supplementary list of books for essay topics is therefore added.

1. The Development of Economic History.

Gide, C. and Rist, C. History of Economic Thought, Book IV, Chap. I.
Ingram, J. K. History of Political Economy. ed. 1898, chapters VI, VII; ed. 1915, chapters VI, VIII.

2. Werner Sombart and Max Weber as exponents of the ideal type method

Parsons, T. Capitalism in Recent German Literature, Journal of Political Economy, vol 36, pp. 641-661; vol. 37, pp. 31-51.
Weber, General Economic History, pp. 338-370. German ed. 1924, pp. 289-315.

3. History as a genetic science.

Sée, H. Science et Philosophie de l’histoire, pp. 116-156, 228-233.
or
Rickert, H. Die Grenzen der naturwissenschaftlichen Begriffsbildung, 1902, pp. 1-29, 289-304; 1913, 1-29, 256-273; 1921, pp. 1-23, 215-230.

4. The Nature of Historical Process.

Tarde, G.        Social Laws, pp. 1-67.

5. A Pluralistic Concept of Social Evolution

Tarde, G. Social Laws, pp, 144-213.
or Ogburn, W. F. Social Change (1923) pp. 56-145.

6. Mercantilism.

Heckscher, E.F. Mercantilism, I, pp. 19-44, II, pp. 13-52.

*   *   *  *   *

[As can be seen from the date here, for the second term of 1940-41, Usher simply used his second term syllabus from 1938-1939 with a couple of penciled additions. These additions are given below in boldface within square brackets]

Economics 136
1938-39

A final examination will be scheduled, consisting of an essay prepared prior to the examination upon any one of the topics listed below.

No student will be responsible for more material than is presented by the titles suggested under the various topics. Relevant material will be selected from the titles listed.

[In many cases, any one of the titles listed will be sufficient.]

1. The significance of the scientific method for economic history.

Whitehead, A. N.       The Function of Reason,
___________________          Science and the Modern World.
___________________          The Concept of Nature.
Sée, H.            Science et Philosophie de l’histoire.

2. The problem of novelty in the theory of social evolution.

Bergson, H.    Creative Evolution.
Tarde, G.        La Logique Sociale.
___________         Social Laws.
___________         L’invention considerée comme moteur de l’evolution sociale.
Usher, A. P.    A History of Mechanical Inventions.

3. Pluralism and multilinear concepts of social evolution.

James. W.       Pluralism.
Tarde, G.        Social Laws.
___________         La Logique Sociale.
Ogburn, W. F.            Social Change.

4. The Process of Innovation.

Koffka, K.       The Growth of the Mind.
Gilfillan, S.C.   The Sociology of Invention.
Rossman, J.    The Psychology of the Inventor.
Usher, A.P.     A History of Mechanical Inventions.

5.  Logical Problems of the Genetic Sciences.

(Baldwin, J.M. Development and Evolution.
Rickert, H.      Die Grenzen der naturwissenschaftlichen Begriffsbildung.
[Haldane, R. B. The Reign of Relativity.]

6. The concept of industrial evolution.

Bücher, K. Industrial Evolution

7. The Ideal Type Method and the Theory of Social Evolution

Parsons, T. Capitalism in Recent German Literature, Journal of Political Economy, vol. 36, 641-661; 37, 31-51.
Nussbaum, F.L. A History of the Economic Institutions of Modern Europe.
or
Weber, M. General Economic History.

8. Karl Marx and the Materialistic Interpretation of History.

Bober, M. Karl Marx’s Interpretation of History.
Sée, H. The Economic Interpretation of History.

9. The Concept of Capitalism as a basis for the interpretation of modern economic history.

any one of the following texts:
Hobson, J.A.    The Evolution of Modern Capitalism.
Sée, H.               Modern Capitalism.
Hammond, J. L. and Barbara. The Rise of Modern Industry.
Bober, M.         Karl Marx’s Interpretation of History.

[10. Religion and the Rise of Capitalism

Tawney, R. H. Religion and the Rise of Capitalism.
Robertson, H. M. The Rise of Economic Individualism.]

 

Source: Harvard University Archives. Syllabi, course outlines and reading lists in Economics, 1895-2003 (HUC 8522.2.1), Box 2, Folder 1940-41.

Image Source:  Harvard Class Album 1939.

Categories
Chicago Curriculum Fields

Chicago. Advanced General Survey Courses in Economics. Memo, 1926

The memo of this posting was written by the head of the Chicago department of economics, Leon Carroll Marshall. I have chosen this to begin a category “Fields”. The groups named below were tasked with preparing bibliographies, not for use in the survey courses, but to make explicit the level of preparation expected of students in those courses. Cox and Mints by the following summer apparently established “Money and banking” as a field distinct from business finance (a memo in the same folder dated August 9, 1927).  It is also interesting to note that Marshall seems to have thought it important to pair economics and business in as many fields as he could.

______________________

November 30, 1926

Memorandum from L. C. Marshall to All Persons Mentioned Herein:

The problem attacked in this memorandum is that of carrying through effectively our arrangements with respect to our advanced general survey courses—courses that in the past we have sometimes referred to as “Introduction to the Graduate Study of X,” although we are not now following this terminology.

The following background facts will need to be kept in mind:

  1. We are to have introductory point of view courses designed to give an organic view of the Economic Order. These courses are numbered 102, 103, 104.
  2. Our next range of courses is designed primarily to deal with method. This range includes: 1. Economic History; 2. Statistics; 3. Accounting; 4. Intermediate Theory.
  3. The foregoing seven courses are the only courses for which we assume responsibility as far as the ordinary [Arts and Literature] undergraduate is concerned. It may well be that from time to time some member of the staff will be interested in giving for undergraduates a course on some live problem of the day, but this is an exceptional matter and not a matter of our standard arrangement.
  4. Our best undergraduates may move on to the type of courses referred to above in the first paragraph, such as courses 330, 340, 335, 345, etc. In general the prerequisites for admission to these courses (as far a undergraduates are concerned) would be a certain number of majors in our work plus 27 majors with an average of B. Under the regulations which the Graduate Faculty has laid down, students who have less than 27 majors could not be admitted to these courses except with the consent of the group and Dean Laing.

 

It is highly essential that our work in these advanced survey courses such as 330, 340, 335, 345, etc. shall:

  1. Really assume the method courses mentioned above: really be conducted at a level which assumes that the student possesses certain techniques.
  2. Really assume an adequate background of subject-matter content.

 

Will the person whose name is underscored in each group undertake (as promptly as reasonably may be) the responsibility of conducting conferences designed

  1. To lead to explicit definite arrangements looking toward the actual utilization of the earlier method courses in these advance survey courses
  2. To prepare a bibliography that can be mimeographed and placed in each student’s hands who enters one of these advanced survey courses. This bibliography is not to be a bibliography of the course (that is a separate matter) but a bibliography of what is assumed by way of preparation for the course. Whether a somewhat different bibliography should be made for the Economics course and the Business course in a given field is left for each group to discuss. Personally I hope that it will be a single bibliography for the two. Mr. Palyi suggests the desirability of a bibliographical article (worthy of publication) for each field. This seems to me an admirable suggestion—one difficult to resist.

 

Will each leader of the group referred to below please put the outcome of your discussion in writing and send to the undersigned? It is to be hoped that you will find other matters to report upon in addition to the foregoing.

GROUPS

  1. The Financial System and Financial Administration

Meech, Mints, Cox, Palyi

  1. Labor and Personnel Administration

Douglas, Millis, Stone, Kornhauser

  1. The Market and the Administration of Marketing

Palmer, Duddy, Barnes, Dinsmore

  1. Risk and Its Administration

Nerlove, Cox, Millis, Mints

  1. Transportation, Communication and Traffic Administration

Sorrell, Wright, Duddy, Douglas

  1. Government Finance

Viner, Millis, Douglas, Stone

  1. Population and the Standard of Living

Kyrk, Douglas, Viner

  1. Resources, Technology and the Administration of Production

Mitchell, Daines, McKinsey

 

The following fields are not included in this memorandum either because of specific course prerequisites or because of obvious difficulties in the case:

  1. Economic Theory and Principles of Administration
  2. Statistics and Accounting
  3. Economic History and Historical Method
  4. Social Direction and Control of Economic Activity.

 

Source: University of Chicago Archives. Department of Economics, Records. Box 22, Folder 6.

Image Source: Leon Carroll Marshall. University of Chicago Photographic Archive, apf1-04114, Special Collections Research Center, University of Chicago Library.