Categories
Johns Hopkins Seminar Speakers

Johns Hopkins. Political Economy Seminar. Presenters and Topics, 1923-24

 

The graduate economic seminary at Johns Hopkins University kept good records of the weekly sessions so that we know the names of all the presenters and their topics. I have added the academic backgrounds for graduate students and faculty alike from the published Johns Hopkins Circular.

The economic seminary schedule for the following years have also been posted:

1903-1904
1904-1905

1922-1923
1923-1924
1924-1925
1925-1926
1926-1927

___________________

POLITICAL ECONOMY
GRADUATE COURSES

The graduate instruction in Political Economy is designed primarily to meet the needs of advanced students preparing for a professional career in economic science. The courses afford systematic instruction in general economic principles, intimate acquaintance with special fields of economic activity, and, most important of all, knowledge of and ability to employ sound methods of economic research. The work centres in the Economic Seminary, the membership of which is limited to the most advanced students, and the primary design of which is to develop scientific research in economic study and investigation…

…The Economic Seminary

Two hours weekly through the year.Professors Hollander and Barnett.
The work of the year will be the study of representative forms of industrial development in the United States, and the analysis of significant activities of American labor organizations.

 

Source: The Johns Hopkins University Circular, Vol. 44 (March 1925), p. 67.

_________________________

MEMBERS OF THE ECONOMIC SEMINARY
1923-1924

Graduate Students

Baugus, Miss Okie

A.B Berea College 1922. 2ndyear Political Economy.

Chen, Chao Ming

Fuhkien Provincial College. A.B., Johns Hopkins University 1922. A.M. 1924. 2ndyear Political Science.

Fedder, Abraham

A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1921. 3rdyear Political Economy.

Fossum, Paul Robert

A.B. Park Region Luther College 1915; A.M. Johns Hopkins University 1923. 4thyear Political Economy.

Gillies, Robert Carlyle

A.B., Princeton University, 1920. 3rdyear Political Economy

Golden, Miss Helen

A.B., Goucher College 1921. 2ndyear Political Economy.

Hefner, Helen

A.B. Goucher College 1923. 1styear Political Economy.

Levin, Benjamin Szold

A.B. Johns Hopkins University 1922. 2ndyear Political Economy.

Mitchell, George Sinclair

A.B. University of Richmond 1923. 1styear Political Economy.

Morrissy, Miss Elizabeth

A.B. Beloit College 1908; A.M. Johns Hopkins University 1922. 3rdyear Political Economy (part-time).

Seibert, Mrs. Louise Cleret

A.B. Goucher College, 1920. 2ndyear Political Economy (part-time).

Shaw, Albert, Jr.

A.B. Princeton University, 1919. 1styear Political Economy.

Shocket, Louis

A.B. University of Richmond 1923. 1styear Political Economy.

Siegel, Miss Jeanette R.

A.B. Goucher College 1922. 2ndyear Political Economy.

 

Faculty

George Ernest Barnett, Professor of Statistics [at present rank, 1911-; first appointment, 1901]

A.B., Randolph-Macon College, 1891; Fellow, Johns Hopkins University, 1899-1900, and Ph.D., 1901.

George Heberton Evans, Jr., Instructor in Political Economy [first appointment, 1924]

A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1920.

Jacob H. Hollander, Professor of Political Economy [at present rank, 1904-; first appointment, 1894]

A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1891, Fellow, 1893-94, and Ph.D., 1894; Treasurer of the Island of Porto Rico, 1900-01; Special Commissioner Plenipotentiary to Santo Domingo, 1905-06; Financial Adviser of the Dominican Republic, 1908-10; Member of the Academic Council.

Broadus Mitchell, Associate in Political Economy [at present rank, 1922-; first appointment, 1919]

A.B., University of South Carolina, 1913; Fellow, Johns Hopkins University, 1916-17, and Ph.D., 1918.

William Oswald Weyforth, AssociateProfessor in Political Economy [at present rank, 1922-; first appointment, 1919]

A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1912, and Ph.D., 1915; Instructor, Western Reserve University, 1915-17.

 

Seminar Presentations
1923-24

October 10, 1923

The opening meeting of the economic seminary of the session was held in room 315 on Wednesday at 2 o’clock. Professor [George E.] Barnett read a paper on “Collective Bargaining in the Anthracite Industry”.

October 17, 1923

Professor [Jacob H.] Hollander read a paper on “Combination and Profits in the Anthracite Coal Industry”.

October 24, 1923.

Associate Professor [William O.] Weyforth read a paper on “Earnings in the Anthracite Coal Industry as Disclosed by the Annual Corporate Reports.”

October 31, 1923

Professor [George E.] Barnett read a paper on the “Earnings of Anthracite Railways”.

November 7, 1923

Mr. [Abraham] Fedder read a paper on “Occupational Changes in the United States”.

November 14, 1923

Dr. [Broadus] Mitchell read a paper on “Cotton Mills in Southern Civilization”.

November 21, 1923

Mr. [Paul Robert] Fossum read a paper on the “Cooperative Elevator Movement in North Dakota”.

November 28, 1923

Professor [George E.] Barnett read a paper on the “Probable Yield of the Income Tax in Maryland”.

December 5, 1923

Mr. [Albert] Shaw [Jr.] read a paper on the “Cooperative Marketing of Milk”.

December 12, 1923

Mr. [Chao Ming] Chen read a paper on “The Land Tax in China”.

December 19, 1923

Mr. [Benjamin Szold] Levin read a paper on the “Farm Loan Banks”.

January 2, 1924

Mr. [George Heberton] Evans read a paper on “Apartment House Rents in Baltimore”.

January 9, 1924

Mr. [Abraham] Fedder read a paper on “Direct Services in the National Income”.

January 16, 1924

Mr. [Paul Robert] Fossum read a paper on “The Agrarian Movement in North Dakota”.

January 23, 1924

Mrs. [Louise Cleret] Seibert read a paper on the “Eight Hour Law for Letter Carriers”.

January 30, 1924

Mr. [Louis] Shockett read a paper on “Immigrants in the Needle Trades”.

February 6, 1924

Mr. [George Sinclair] Mitchell read a paper on the “Population in the Southern Appalachian Mountains”.

February 13, 1924

Mr. [Robert Carlyle] Gillies read a paper on “Readjustment of Relative Freight Rates”.

February 20, 1924

Mr. [Abraham] Fedder read a paper on “Occupational Changes in the United States”.

February 27, 1924

Mr. [Robert Carlyle] Gillies continued his report on “Readjustment of Relative Freight Rates”.

March 5, 1924

Dr. [Broadus] Mitchell read a paper on “Frederick Law Olmsted, A Critic of the Old South”.

March 12, 1924

Mr. [Chao Ming] Chen read a paper on “The Chinese Land Tax”.

March 19, 1924

Mr. [Abraham] Fedder read a paper on “Trade and Transportation in the National Income”.

March 26, 1924

Mrs. [Louise Cleret] Seibert read a paper on “Trade Unionism in France”.

April 2, 1924

Mr. [George Heberton] Evans read a paper on “The Course of Apartment Rentals in Baltimore”.

April 9, 1924

Mr. [Paul Robert] Fossum read a paper on “The Early Agrarian Movement”.

April 16, 1924

Mr. [Albert] Shaw [Jr.] read a paper on “Organizations Among Milk Producers”.

April 23, 1924

Easter Recess—did not hold seminar.

April 30, 1924

Miss [Helen] Golden read a paper on the “Education of Crippled Children in Baltimore”.

May 7, 1924

Miss [Jeanette R.] Siegel read a paper on the “The Social Implications Involved in Violations in the Marriage Laws Among Immigrants”.

May 14, 1924

Dr. [William O.] Weyforth reviewed Mellon’s book–“Taxation—The People’s Business”.

Seminary ended for the year.

 

Sources:   Johns Hopkins University. Eisenhower Library, Ferdinand Hamburger, Jr. Archives. Department of Political Economy, Series 1. Minutes of the Economic Seminary, 1892-1951. Folder “1922-1940”.

The Johns Hopkins University Circular, Vol. 43 (January 1924).

The Johns Hopkins University Circular, Vol. 43 (November 1924).

Image Source: Webpage “Gilman Hall circa 1920” in the Hopkins Perspective, 1876-Today collection.

Categories
Exam Questions Johns Hopkins Suggested Reading Syllabus

Johns Hopkins. Income Distribution Theory, Readings and Exams. Machlup, 1950’s

 

 

The following reading list on the theory of income distribution taught by Fritz Machlup in the mid-1950s at Johns Hopkins University was found in a file in the Evsey Domar papers marked “Macroeconomics, Old Reading Lists”. I hadn’t realized until this post that Machlup’s papers are archived at the Hoover Institution, where 45 boxes alone are filled with the archival remains of his academic career. OK, next time.

I remember that my dissertation supervisor, the same Evsey Domar, did not particularly “like” Fritz Machlup. The two of them were at Johns Hopkins in the 1950s, Machlup being a dozen years Domar’s senior. It is not that Evsey Domar would have actually trash-talked Fritz Machlup in front of a student of his, but I do have a vague recollection of Domar judging Machlup’s approach to economics as having been excessively concerned with terminological issues over substantive economics. Also I sensed that Domar considered Machlup to have viewed matters of academic rank and relative status with excessive seriousness. But these memories fall closer to the legend end of the historical spectrum than to those frequencies reserved for documented anecdotes. 

____________________

JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY
THE THEORY OF RELATIVE INCOMES
18-603, Fall Term 1954-55
Prof. Fritz Machlup

READING LIST

Texts:

  1. American Economic Association, Readings in the Theory of Income Distribution. (Philadelphia: Blakiston, 1946)
  2. Any one of the books on the list below.

 

  1. General Background

Alfred Marshall, Principles of Economics (London: Macmillan, 8th ed. 1936) Books V and VI.

[Handwritten note, “theory of derived demand exp. Ch. 1-6”, apparently referring to Marshall, Book V (“derived demand” found in Chapter 6 of Book V)]

Eugen v. Böhm-Bawerk, Positive Theory of Capital (London: 1891; Reprinted New York, Stechert, 1940) Book III, Ch. X; Book IV, Ch. VII.

Philip H. Wicksteed, The Common Sense of Political Economy. London: Routledge, 1933) Vol. I, Book I, Chapter IX.

Frank H. Knight, Risk, Uncertainty and Profit (Boston: 1921, Repreinted London School of Economic) Part II.

John R. Hicks, Value and Capital (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1939) Part II.

 

  1. General Equilibrium Theory

Gustav Cassel, A Theory of Social Economy (New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1924) Chapter IV.

Bertil Ohlin, Interregional and International Trade (Cambridge: Harvard Univ. Press, 1933) Appendix I.

George Stigler, Production and Distribution Theories (New York: Macmillan, 1941) Chapter IX and XII.

Joan Robinson, “Euler’s Theorem and the Problem of Distribution” Economic Journal, Vol. XLIV (1934).

 

  1. Marginal Productivity and Substitution

John Bates Clark, The Distribution of Wealth (New York: Macmillan, 1900) Chapter XII and XIII.

Joan Robinson, Economics of Imperfect Competition (London: Macmillan, 1934) Books VII, VIII, IX.

John R. Hicks, The Theory of Wages (London: Macmillan, 1935) Chapter I and VI.

Paul H. Douglas, The Theory of Wages (New York: Macmillan, 1934) Chapter III.

Paul H. Douglas, “Are There Laws of Production?” American Economic Review, Vol. XXXVIII (1948).

Fritz Machlup, “The Commonsense of the Elasticity of Substitution,” Review of Economic Studies, Vol. II (1935).

Richard A. Lester, “Shortcomings of Marginal Analysis for Wage-Employment Problems.” American Economic Review, Vol. XXXVI (1946)

Fritz Machlup, “Marginal Analysis and Empirical Research” American Economic Review, Vol. XXXVI (1946).

Articles by Cassels, Stigler, Chamberlin, Machlup, Robinson, Lange, and Kalecki in A.E.A. Readings.

 

  1. Wage

John R. Hicks, The Theory of Wages Chapters II, III, IV.

Paul H. Douglas, The Theory of Wages Chapter X.

Edwin Cannan, “The Demand for Labour”, Economic Journal, Vol. XLII. (1932)

Fritz Machlup, The Political Economy of Monopoly (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1952) Chapters IX and X.

Articles by Robertson, Robbins, Bloom, Rolph, Reynolds, Lerner, Tarshis, and Dunlop in AEA Readings.

 

  1. Rent

David Ricardo, Principles of Political Economy and Taxation (1st ed. 1817) Chapter II.

Hubert D. Henderson, Supply and Demand (Cambridge: University Press, 1922, Revised, 1932) Chapter VI.

Joan Robinson, Economics of Imperfect Competition, Chapter VIII.

Gordon F. Bloom, “Technical Progress, Costs, and Rent”. Economica IX, New Series (1942)

Articles by Buchanan, and Boulding in AEA Readings.

 

  1. Interest

Eugen v. Böhm-Bawerk, The Positive Theory of Capital, Books II, V, VI, and VII.

Knut Wicksell, Lectures on Political Economy (New York: Macmillan, 1934) Vol. I, Part II, Ch. 2.

John Maynard Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (London: Macmillan, 1936) Chapters 11, 12, 13 and 14.

Friedrich A. Hayek, The Pure theory of Capital (London: Macmillan, 1941) Chapters III, V, VI, VIII, XI-XIV.

Fritz Machlup, “Professor Knight and the ‘Period of Production’”, Journal of Political Economy, Vol. XLIII (1935).

____________ “The Rate of Interest as Cost Factor and as Capitalization Factor”, American Economic Review, Vol. XXV, (1935)

Articles by Hayek, Knight, Keynes, Robertson, Hicks, Somers, and Lutz, in Readings.

 

  1. Profit

Frank H. Knight, Risk, Uncertainty and Profit, Chapters IX-XII.

Joseph Schumpeter, The Theory of Economic Development (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1934) Chapter IV.

Robert Triffin, Monopolistic Competition and General Equilibrium Theory (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1940) Chapter V.

Fritz Machlup, The Economics of Sellers’ Competition (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1952), Chapters VII and VIII.

Articles by Knight, Hart, Gordon, and Crum, in Readings.

Source: Duke University. David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Economists’ Papers Project, Papers of Evsey Domar, Box 15, Folder “Macroeconomics, Old Reading Lists”.

____________________

THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY
The Theory of Relative Incomes
18-603

January 21, 1953

Professor Fritz Machlup

Answer three questions, one from each group.

Write on loose sheets of paper; start a new sheet for each question.
Identify each sheet by the Question Number in the left corner and your Examination Number (which you draw before the examination) in the right corner; your name should appear nowhere.(I.

  1. Describe in words, without using any symbols, the Walrasian system of general equilibrium, stating the essential assumptions, the variables assumed to be given, and the unknowns to be derived.

II.

  1. Discuss the influence of different types of inventions on the marginal productivity of labor. Indicate also their probably effects on the total income of the labor class and on its relative share in the national income.
  2. Dennis H. Robertson divides the effects which “an artificial raising of the wages” is apt to have upon employment into “two analytically separable reactions”, first, “a movement along the existing [marginal productivity] curve,” and second, “a cumulative lowering of the curve”. Explain the two reactions and indicate what assumptions concerning other factors of production, especially capital, are involved.

III.

  1. State the three grounds on which Böhm-Bawerk bases his explanation of the existence of interest and discuss whether each or any of them constitutes a necessary and/or sufficient condition of the existence of interest. (You may avoid committing yourself to the arguments expressed by attributing them to “some writers”.)
  2. Without indicating your own opinions or inclinations, present both sides in the controversy between Frank H. Knight and the “Austrians” with respect to the following points:
    1. that all capital is conceptually perpetual or conceptually non-permanent;
    2. that economic progress may result in a “shortening” of the investment period;
    3. that an increase in the supply of capital need not change the original factors of the remote past.

Source: Johns Hopkins University. Eisenhower Library, Ferdinand Hamburger, Jr. Archives. Department of Political Economy, Series 6, Exams, 1956-62. Box 3/1, Folder “Graduate Exams, 1933-1965”.

____________________

THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY
THEORY OF RELATIVE INCOMES
18.603

January 1957

Professor Fritz Machlup

Answer four questions, one from each part.

Write on loose sheets of paper; start a new sheet for each question.
Identify each sheet by the Question Number in the left corner and your Examination Number (which you draw before the examination) in the right corner; your name should appear nowhere.
You are on your honor not to use notes or to give or accept advice.

PART I.

  1. A product, X, is made from three “ingredients” or factors of production, A, B, and C, all of which are necessary and can be used only in a fixed proportion. Total output of X is 1000 units per unit of time; the product sells at a price of $100 per unit. The factor costs per unit of product are $60 for A, $30 for B, and $10 for C. The supplies of A and B are perfectly elastic to the industry. The demand for X has an elasticity of -2. The industry is competitive both in its buying and selling.
    Assume that the quantity of C which is available to the industry is reduced by 20 per cent. Calculate the elasticity of the industry’s derived demand for C. Show your reasoning step by step.
  2.      a. Define or explain the concept of elasticity of substitution as it is used by Mrs. Robinson.
    1. Is it “technical” substitution or “total” substitution which is involved in Mrs. Robinson’s concept? What is the difference between the two substitutabilities?

PART II.

  1. Discuss various concepts of “bargaining power” in the labor market, commenting on the selection of criteria, the problem of measurability, and the uses to which the concepts are put.
  2. Ricardo says in the chapter “On Rent” of his Principles of Political Economy and Taxation: “If the high price of corn were the effect, and not the cause of rent, price would be proportionately influenced as rents were high or low, and rent would be a component part of price. But that corn which is produced by the greatest quantity of labor is the regulator of the price of corn; and rent does not and cannot enter in the least degree as a component part of its price.” Discuss. Take account of the possibility that land has other uses besides the production of corn.

PART III.

  1. Without indicating your own opinions or inclinations, present both sides in the controversy between Frank H. Knight and the “Austrians” with respect to the following points:
    1. that all capital is conceptually perpetual or conceptually non-permanent;
    2. that economic progress may result in a “shortening” of the investment period;
    3. that an increase in the supply of capital need not change the original factors of the remote past.
    4. that it is not possible to identify the contributions of the original factors of the remote past.
  2. On p. 208 of his Lectures, Vol. I, Wicksell quotes the following statement by Gustav Cassel: “A man who attaches the same importance to future needs as to present ones, if he expects to be able to provide for his needs in the future just as easily as he does now, has no reason for setting aside anything of his present income.” According to Wicksell, “Cassel is not quite correct” inasmuch as his “argument actually presupposes the absence of any rate of interest.” Explain.

PART IV.

  1. What, if anything, does general-equilibrium theory contribute to the understanding or development of income-distribution theory?
    In order to facilitate a thoughtful discussion of this question it is suggested that you treat it in three parts:

    1. The function of a theory of relative incomes. (What is it designed to do? What kind of general principles or conceptual schemes seem to be useful in developing a theory of income distribution?)
    2. The essentials of general-equilibrium theory. (What is it designed to do and how? What do we learn from it?)
    3. The contribution, or lack of it, of general-equilibrium systems to the theory of relative incomes.

 

Source: Johns Hopkins University. Eisenhower Library, Ferdinand Hamburger, Jr. Archives. Department of Political Economy, Series 6, Exams, 1956-62. Box 3/1, Folder “Graduate Exams, 1933-1965”.

Image Source:  Fritz Machlup page  at the website Austrian Economics Center.

 

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Johns Hopkins Seminar Speakers

Johns Hopkins. Economic Seminary, 1922-23

 

An earlier post on the economic seminary of Johns Hopkins University (1903-04) was taken from an official publication of the university. In the meantime I have found the original minutes of the “economic conference”, followed by the “economic seminary” for the period 1892-1951! Up through the 1921-22 academic year, the minutes are handwritten, reasonably legible, but still harder to read than the typed minutes beginning in 1922-23. I’ll start with the easier reading first.

The economic seminary schedule for the following years have also been posted:

1903-1904
1904-1905

1922-1923
1923-1924
1924-1925
1925-1926
1926-1927

__________________

POLITICAL ECONOMY
GRADUATE COURSES

The graduate instruction in Political Economy is designed primarily to meet the needs of advanced students preparing for a professional career in economic science. The courses afford systematic instruction in general economic principles, intimate acquaintance with special fields of economic activity, and, most important of all, knowledge of and ability to employ sound methods of economic research. The work centres in the Economic Seminary, the membership of which is limited to the most advanced students, and the primary design of which is to develop scientific research in economic study and investigation…

…The Economic Seminary

Two hours weekly through the year. Professors Hollander and Barnett, Associate Professor Weyforth, Miss Jacobs, and Dr. Mitchell.
The work of the year will be the study of representative forms of industrial development in the United States, and the analysis of significant activities of American labor organizations.

 

Source: The Johns Hopkins University Circular, Vol. XLI, 1922, p. 342.

__________________

MEMBERS OF THE ECONOMIC SEMINARY
1922-1923

Students

Black, Stanley Roberts

A.B., Colby College, 1921. 1st year, Political Economy, History, and Political Science.

Chen, Chao Ming

Fuhkien Privincial College. 2nd year undergraduate residence, candidate for A.B., Johns Hopkins University. Professor Latane, adviser.

Culver, Lydia Margaretta (Miss)

A.B. Goucher College, 1921. 1st year, Political Economy

Evans, George Heberton, Jr.

A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1920. 2nd year, Political Economy, Political Science, and Psychology

Fedder, Abraham

A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1921. 1st year, Political Economy, Political Science, and History

Fossum, Paul Robert

A.B. Park Region Luther College, 1915. 2nd year, Political Economy

Gillies, Robert Carlyle

A.B., Princeton University, 1920. 1st year (part-time), Political Economy

Hankin, Anne E.

Attendant on courses in social economics [1923]

Hartin, William McCants

B.Litt., Furman University, 1897, and A.M., 1899; Th.M., Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, 1904. Part-time, Political Economy

Howard, Mary Cushing (Miss)

Bryn Mawr School. Attendant on Courses in Economics and Business Economics.

Kahn, Hortense Miller

A.B., Goucher College, 1916. 1st year (part-time), Political Economy.

Levin, Benjamin Szold

Park School. Senior undergraduate, Dr. Weyforth, Adviser

Meeth, Ruth Elizabeth (Miss)

A.B., Goucher College, 1918. 1st year, Political Economy

Nelson, Louise Dallam

Attendant on courses in social economics.

Pasternak, Lillian

A.B., Goucher College, 1920. 1st year, Political Economy

Saiontz, Leon Robert

A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1921. 2nd year, Political Economy

Suzuki, Hitoshi

Master of Commerce, Meiji University (Japan), 1920. 1st year, Political Economy

Tingley, Ruth (Miss)

A.B., Goucher College, 1914. 1st year, Political Economy

Whistler, Margaret Kathryn (Miss)

A.B., Goucher College, 1921. 1st year, Political Economy.

Wyckoff, Vertrees Judson

A.B., Princeton University, 1920. 1st year (part-time), Political Economy

Griffiss, Bartow [Added to list of members]

A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1920. 2nd year, Political Economy, Political Science, and Psychology

Seibert , Louise Cleret (Mrs.) [Presented, but not on list of members]

A.B. Goucher College, 1920. (probably) 1st year (part-time) Political Economy

Taketomi, Yasuo [Presented, but not on list of members]

A.B., Waseda University. 2nd year, Political Economy

 

Faculty

Jacob H. Hollander, Professor of Political Economy [at present rank, 1904-; first appointment, 1894]

A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1891, Fellow, 1893-94, and Ph.D., 1894; Treasurer of the Island of Porto Rico, 1900-01; Special Commissioner Plenipotentiary to Santo Domingo, 1905-06; Financial Adviser of the Dominican Republic, 1908-10.

George Ernest Barnett, Professor of Statistics [at present rank, 1911-; first appointment, 1901]

A.B., Randolph Macon College, 1891; Fellow, Johns Hopkins University, 1899-1900, and Ph.D., 1901.

William Oswald Weyforth, Associate (Associate Professor Elect) in Political Economy [at present rank, 1919-]

A.B., Johns Hopkins University, 1912, and Ph.D., 1915; Instructor, Western Reserve University, 1915-17.

Broadus Mitchell, Instructor (Associate Elect) in Political Economy [at present rank, 1919-]

A.B., University of South Carolina, 1913; Fellow, Johns Hopkins University, 1916-17, and Ph.D., 1918.

Miss Theo Jacobs, Associate in Social Economics [1919-]

A.B., Goucher College, 1901; Federated Charities of Baltimore (District Assistant, 1905-07, District Secretary, 1907-10, Assistant General Secretary, 1910-17, Acting General Secretary, 1917-1919.

__________________

 Minutes of the Seminary
1923-24

October 11, 1922

The opening meeting of the economic seminary of the session was held in room 315 on Wednesday at 2 o’clock. Mr. [Bartow] Griffiss read a paper on “The Relation Between Fluctuations in the Call Money Rate and in Stocks”.

October 18, 1922

The economic seminary met at 2 o’clock. Professor [George E.] Barnett read a paper on “Index Numbers of the Total Cost of Living as a Measure of Satisfaction”.

October 25, 1922.

Mr. [Robert Carlyle] Gillies read two papers , (1) “Minimum Health and Decency Budgets as Employed in Labor Union Arguments,” and (2) “Relative Cost of Government and Private Borrowing”.

November 1, 1922

Mr. [Vertrees Judson] Wyckoff read a paper on “Illustrations of the Tactics of Two Trade Unions During Period of Commercial Depression”.

November 8, 1922

Mr. Paul Robert Fossum read a paper on “The Agrarian Movement in North Dakota”.

November 15, 1922

Professor [Jacob H.] Hollander read a paper on “The Allied Debt”.

November 22, 1922

Mr. [Stanley Roberts] Black read a paper on “Recent Investment Policies of Mutual Savings Banks”.

November 29, 1922

Mr. [Leon Robert] Saiontz read a paper on “Tax Exempt Securities in the United States”.

December 6, 1922

Mr. [Abraham] Fedder read a paper on “History of the Index Numbers of the Cost of Living in Great Britain”.

December 13, 1922

Mr. [William McCants] Hartin read a paper on “Control of the Boll Weevil in the United States”.

December 20, 1922

Miss [Lillian] Pasternak read a paper on “Interrelated Dependent Families”.

January 3, 1923

Mr. [Bartow] Griffiss read a paper on “Control of the Call Money Rate”.

January 10, 1923

Mr. [Benjamin Szold] Levin read a paper on “The Farm Loan Act”.

January 17, 1923

Mr. [Robert Carlyle] Gillies read a paper on “Performance of the U.S. Railroad Administration”.

January 24, 1923

Mrs. [Louise Cleret] Seibert read a paper on “Unions of Government Employees”.

January 31, 1923

Miss [Mary Cushing] Howard read a paper on “The American Federation of Labor”.

February 7, 1923

Dr. [William O.] Weyforth read a paper on “Exchange Rates and Purchasing Power Parities”.

February 14, 1923

Professor [Jacob H.] Hollander gave a talk and read some Letters of Adam Smith.

February 21, 1923

Dr. [Broadus] Mitchell talked on “The Recent Accession to the Hutzler Collection”.

February 28, 1923

Mr. [Bartow] Griffiss talked on “The Operation of the New York Call Money Market”.

March 7, 1923

Mr. [Vertrees Judson] Wyckoff read a paper on the “Conclusions on the Readjustment of Trade Union Agreements in a Period of Depression”.

March 14, 1923

Mr. [Stanley Roberts] Black read a paper on “Legislative Policies in Respect to Investments of Mutual Savings Banks”.

March 21, 1923

Mr. [Paul Robert] Fossum read a paper on “The Functions of the Bank of North Dakota in the Industrial Program of the Non-Partisan League”.

March 28, 1923

Mr. [Hitoshi] Suzuki read a paper on “Post-War Finance in Japan”.

April 11, 1923

Mr. [Abraham] Fedder read a paper on “Occupational Changes Due to Invention and Improvements”.

April 18, 1923

Mr. [Leon Robert] Saiontz read a paper on “History of Tax Exempt Securities”.

April 25, 1923

Miss [Ruth Elizabeth] Meeth read a paper on “Placing Out Work of the Henry Watson Children’s Aid Society”.

May 2, 1923

Miss [Ruth] Tingley read a paper on “The Unmarried Mother and Her Child”.

May 9, 1923

Miss [Lydia Margaretta] Culver read a paper on the “History of Baltimore Association for the Improvement of the Conditions of the Poor”.

May 15, 1923

Mr. [Yasuo] Taketomi read a paper on “Thomas Hood’s Social Verse”.

May 23, 1923

Miss [Margaret Kathryn] Whistler read a paper on “Probation in Baltimore”.

Seminary ended for the year.

 

Sources:  

Dates, presenters and topics from: Johns Hopkins University. Eisenhower Library, Ferdinand Hamburger, Jr. Archives. Department of Political Economy, Series 1. Minutes of the Economic Seminary, 1892-1951. Folder “1922-1940”.

 Information about the members of the seminary from: The Johns Hopkins University Circular, Vol. XLI, 1922 and The Johns Hopkins University Circular, Vol. XLII, 1923.

Image Source:Webpage “Gilman Hall circa 1920” in the Hopkins Perspective, 1876-Today collection.

 

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Johns Hopkins. Memories of Chicago Economics Ph.D. Alumnus and JHU professor Carl Christ, 2017

 

Sometime in the second half of the 1980’s, when my stock as an expert on the economy of the German Democratic Republic was reasonably high and the future fall of the Berlin Wall was still sufficiently somewhere over the rainbow, the President of the Johns Hopkins University (Stephen Mueller) apparently hoped enough to attract me to the young American Institute for Contemporary German Studies of Johns Hopkins in some capacity to have the economics department of the university invite me to present a seminar and talk with colleagues there. Knowing now just how excited departments can be about suggestions coming from the university administration regarding potential appointments, I should have gone into this campus visit with low expectations. 

As it turned out my host for the visit was the senior professor Carl Christ who was the proverbial gentleman and a scholar. He was an engaging and sympathetic mensch with broad interests. From that time I have read with delight his accounts of the Chicago years of the Cowles Commission. He struck me as a scholar you could trust.  I was introduced to his colleague Peter Newman who, if memory serves me correctly,  joined us for lunch. Come to think of it, for my latent interest in the history of economics, I could have hardly had a much better day.

However the story of my day with the Johns Hopkins department of economics would be incomplete without admitting that the seminar did not go well…for me. It was the first time in my (hitherto sheltered) academic life that I was mawled by a pit-bull seminarian over a point that was quite important for his c.v. but of third-order importance for the results of my paper. In any event, there was no further contact one way or another with the Johns Hopkins economics department after that.

My positive impressions of Carl Christ survived and I am delighted to share what I have found out about the life and career of the this fine specimen of  a 1950 University of Chicago economics Ph.D. Note:  “Although his economic training was in the ‘Chicago School,’ he never believed that economic efficiency was a higher goal than social justice,” wrote a daughter, Alice Christ of Lexington, Ky.”

The previous post provides his reading lists for a sequence of econometrics courses he taught at the University of Chicago in 1957.

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Obituary
May 3, 2017

Longtime JHU Economist Carl Christ dies at 93

Carl Christ, Professor Emeritus in the Department of Economics at Johns Hopkins University, passed away on April 21, 2017. Professor Christ was born on September 19, 1923 in Chicago and graduated from the University of Chicago Lab School. He earned his BS in Physics from the University in Chicago in 1943 and his Ph.D. in Economics from the same institution in 1950. He worked as a Junior Physicist on the Manhattan Project in Chicago from 1943 to 1945 and was an Instructor in Physics at Princeton University from 1945 to 1946, after which he enrolled in the graduate program in the Department of Economics at the University of Chicago. He was a Research Associate at the Cowles Commission at Chicago from 1949-1950. He moved to the Department of Economics at Johns Hopkins in 1950, where he served on the faculty until 1955, when he moved back to the Department of Economics at the University of Chicago, where he served as Associate Professor from 1955 to 1961. In 1961, he returned to Johns Hopkins as Professor, where he remained until he retired in 2005 and assumed Emeritus status.

Carl Christ had a distinguished record of scholarship across multiple topics. His interests ranged from econometric methods, especially the testing and evaluation of econometric models, to monetary and fiscal policy and to the history of econometrics. His work on macroeconometric models was rooted in the Cowles Commission tradition of structural econometric models based solidly on economic theory and careful attention to identification, endogeneity, and consistent and efficient estimation. He wrote a seminal paper on the forecast error variances from those types of models and on their sensitivity to model specification. He authored a widely used introductory econometrics textbook in 1966, Econometric Models and Methods, which popularized the structural econometric approach. The textbook was translated into several languages. In the area of monetary and fiscal policy, his major contribution was a deep incorporation of the federal budget constraint in all its dimensions–fiscal, monetary, reserves, debt, and so on–into macroeconometric models, which had inadequately incorporated those features prior to his work. He showed that policy multipliers were very different when the budget constraint was properly modeled. His interest in the history of econometric methods was also strong, and he wrote a history of the Cowles Commission during its first 20 years which was published in 1952, an expanded version of which appeared in the Journal of Economic Literature in 1994, and he wrote a history of the founding of the Econometric Society as well as several other pieces on the history of quantitative analysis. He was a student and admirer of Tjalling Koopmans and, with Martin Beckmann and Marc Nerlove, edited the Scientific Papers of Koopmans. A symposium in his honor where papers relating to his research were presented was held at Johns Hopkins in 1995 and was published in the Journal of Econometrics in 1998.

Christ served in numerous professional and department capacities during his career. He served in multiple capacities of the American Economic Association, including serving as Vice President, serving on its Executive Committee, chairing several other committees, and serving on the Editorial Board of the American Economic Review. He served in numerous roles for the National Bureau of Economic Research, including service as a Member, Vice Chair, and Chair of its Board of Directors. He served on the Council of the Econometric Society and in several other capacities for the Society. He was an elected Fellow of the Econometric Society and the American Statistical Association and received many other citations and awards. At Johns Hopkins, he served as Chair of the Economics Department twice, from 1961 to 1966 and from 1969 to 1970. He also served on numerous university committees throughout his career and into his time as Emeritus Professor. The Department of Economics at Johns Hopkins has a named professorship as well as a named graduate student fellowship in his honor.

He is survived by his wife of 66 years, the former Phyllis Tatsch.

 

Source:   Johns Hopkins University Department of Economics Website. “Longtime JHU Economist Carl Christ dies at 93”.

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IN MEMORIAM
Published Apr 25, 2017

Longtime Johns Hopkins economist Carl F. Christ dies at 93
Trailblazing expert in field of econometrics specialized in fiscal policy and government budget restraint, spent more than 40 years at JHU

by Jill Rosen

 

Carl F. Christ, a distinguished economist whose career at Johns Hopkins University stretched more than 40 years, including two stints leading his department, died Friday. He was 93.

Christ was a trail-blazer in the field of econometrics, where statistical analysis puts economic theories to the test. In the late 1960s he wrote one of the first textbooks on the subject, a book that became a standard text used for decades in economics courses worldwide. Much later, in 1998, the Journal of Econometrics honored him with a special issue, a collection of articles by “friends, colleagues, and professional admirers of his life’s work,” that praised his contributions, his influence, and the “beauty” of his analytical work.

Christ, born in Chicago, graduated in 1943 from the University of Chicago, where his father was on the faculty of the business school. He did not initially pursue economics, but physics, teaching it at Princeton and working on the Manhattan Project, a research effort during World War II that led to the creation of nuclear weapons.

But Christ realized he wanted to use his mathematics ability to help the world in a different, more peaceful way. He once told the News-Letter, “During World War II, I lived in a house full of pacifists while I was working on the atom bomb. I then wanted to do something that had to do with human problems.”

“He wanted to do more good in the world,” said his daughter, Lucy Smith. “He wanted to be constructive and he saw economics as the path to do that.”

After returning to school and earning a PhD in economics from the University of Chicago, Christ joined the faculty of Johns Hopkins in 1950, where he stayed for most of the rest of his career, except for a six-year stint at the University of Chicago.

In addition to pioneering the use of computers to test econometric models, Christ’s niche was monetary and fiscal policy, especially government budget restraint. He is the author of four books, editor of one, and has more than 40 articles in journals and books, as well as more than 60 other publications.

“He was one of the greatest macro econometricians of the 1950s and 1960s,” said Johns Hopkins economist Robert Moffitt. “He worked on the first wave of econometrically-based macroeconomic models of the economy developed at the Cowles Foundation at the University of Chicago, and became a leading authority in the economics profession on their estimation.”

Students at Johns Hopkins chose him to win the George E. Owen Teaching Award in 1985, an award for outstanding teaching and devotion to undergraduates.

In 2008, when the university established a named professorship in his honor—the Center for Financial Economics’ Carl Christ Professorship—his colleagues described it as an honor for “the legacy of a man who has been an inspirational teacher and mentor to generations of Johns Hopkins students.”

Johns Hopkins economics professor emeritus Louis Maccini, who Christ hired, said Christ always had time for junior colleagues and students, ready with constructive criticism and good advice.

“When he hired me he was a very distinguished scholar, and I appreciated how I could talk with him and get sensible advice—passed on as if I was his equal,” Maccini said. “I tried to model myself after him in that regard.”

Beverly Wendland, dean of JHU’s Krieger School of Arts and Sciences, also recalled Christ’s dedication to the university.

“A renowned economist who was beloved by both his students and faculty colleagues, Carl was instrumental in making our Department of Economics the standard-bearer that it is today,” she said.” He will be remembered, not only for his pioneering work in econometrics, but for his love and dedication toward Johns Hopkins.”

Christ was passionate about the university community, joining numerous efforts and boards, and even appearing in a few Johns Hopkins theatrical productions. He was a devoted member of “The Oldtimers,” an informal club for retired faculty and staff.

“He held the thing together,” said Matt Crenson, a Johns Hopkins political scientist and an Oldtimer. “He planned meetings, he made reservations, he discussed the menu, and he sent out notices—I hope we’ll be able to survive without him.”

Off-campus, Christ served on the Maryland Governor’s Council of Economic Advisers and helped the Urban League by drafting brochures on financial topics, like how to buy a house with sustainable mortgage payments.

At Roland Park Place, where he lived, Christ joined the investment advisory committee and the hospitality committee. He could also be regularly spotted at the corner of 41st Street, with a “War is not the answer” sign.

In addition to his daughter Lucy, Christ is survived by his wife of 66 years, Phyllis; daughters Alice Christ and Joan Christ; and five grandchildren.

 

Source: Johns Hopkins University, Hub website.

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Obituary
April 26, 2017

Carl F. Christ, noted Johns Hopkins economist
by Frederick N. Rasmussen
The Baltimore Sun

Carl F. Christ, a noted Johns Hopkins University economist whose career spanned more than four decades and who during World War II worked on the Manhattan Project, died Friday of complications from prostate cancer at Roland Park Place.

He was 93.

“Carl Christ was one of the leading figures in the world on macroeconomics and econometrics, and was clearly one of the most distinguished senior faculty members at the time,” said Louis J. Maccini, who retired from Johns Hopkins in 2013, where he had served as chair of the economics department from 1992 to 2007.

“We have been colleagues and friends for almost 50 years, and it was Carl who hired me at Hopkins in 1969,” he said.

“An important ingredient about Carl was that he was a very constructive person, and his comments and opinions were always constructively offered to students and colleagues,” he said. “When I came to Hopkins, he treated me equally as a colleague, and I appreciated that. It was a key element of his personality that he was always helpful and constructive.”

The son of Jay Finley Christ, a professor in the business school of the University of Chicago, and Maud Trego Christ, an educator and suffragette, Carl Finley Christ was born and raised in Chicago and was a graduate of the University of Chicago Laboratories School, a high school. He attended Colorado College for two years.

He was a 1943 Phi Beta Kappa graduate of the University of Chicago, where he earned a degree in physics.

From 1943 to 1945, he worked as a junior physicist for the Manhattan Project, which led to the development of the atomic bomb.

After his wartime work with the Manhattan Project, Dr. Christ decided to use his mathematics acumen to achieve peaceful ends.

“During World War II, I lived in a house of pacifists while I was working on the atom bomb. I wanted to do something that had to do with human problems,” he once told the Johns Hopkins News-Letter.

After serving as an instructor in physics at Princeton University from 1945 to 1946, he returned to the University of Chicago, where he earned a Ph.D. in economics.

“Although his economic training was in the ‘Chicago School,’ he never believed that economic efficiency was a higher goal than social justice,” wrote a daughter, Alice Christ of Lexington, Ky.

He joined the Hopkins faculty in 1950 as an assistant professor and in 1953 was named assistant professor of political economy.

Dr. Christ was a senior Fulbright research scholar at the University of Cambridge from 1954 to 1955.

Dr. Christ left Homewood in 1955 when he became an associate professor of economics at the University of Chicago, where he taught until 1961. He then returned to Hopkins as professor of political economy.

He was department chair from 1961 to 1966, and again from 1969 to 1970, and in 1977 was appointed to the Abram G. Hutzler professorship in political economy.

“Dr. Christ was a trailblazer in the field of econometrics, where statistical analysis puts economic theories to the test. In the late 1960s, he wrote one of the first textbooks on the subject, a book that became a standard text used for decades in economics courses worldwide,” according to a Johns Hopkins news release announcing his death.

The book, “Econometric Models and Methods,” was published in 1966. He was a contributor to the International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, Volume IV, which was published in 1968; “Simultaneous Equations Estimation,” 1994; and “Econometrics, Macroeconomics and Economic Policy” in 1996.

In 1998, the Journal of Econometrics honored Dr. Christ with a special issue that contained articles from “friends, colleagues and professional admirers of his life’s work,” and recognized him for the “beauty” of his work.

Dr. Christ also pioneered the use of computers to test econometric models. His field of specialties included monetary and fiscal policy, especially government budget restraint.

“He is particularly interested in what is known as the government budget restraint, which involves the three ways the government can raise funds when it spends money — taxing, borrowing or printing more money,” reported The Baltimore Sun in a 1981 article.

“Dr. Christ conceded that it is impossible to develop an economic theory that describes human behavior as well as scientific theory can describe the behavior of molecules,” according to the article.

In addition to his four books, he wrote more than 40 articles in journals and books, as well as in more than 60 other publications, including The Sun, regarding economic matters.

Dr. Christ was the recipient in 1985 of the George E. Owen Teaching Award, presented by Hopkins students for outstanding teaching and devotion to undergraduates.

His courses on macro- and microeconomics, government financial policy and the stock market were popular among students at the Homewood campus.

In 2008, Hopkins established a professorship in his honor at the Center for Financial Economics.

Dr. Christ began a phased-in retirement in 1989 and fully retired in 2009.

“According to department secretary Donna Altoff, he continued to show an exceptional level of interest in the students, and loved to talk to them and took interest in their job searches until the end,” wrote another daughter, Lucy Christ Smith of Seattle, in an email.

He and his wife of 66 years, the former Phyllis Tatsch, were former residents of Juniper Road in Guilford and moved to Roland Park Place in 2006. He remained active on many university committees and boards and even performed in several theatrical productions at Johns Hopkins and the Hamilton Street Club.

He was an active member of The Oldtimers, an informal club for retired Hopkins faculty and staff, where he planned meetings, discussed menus and sent out notices to the membership.

Dr. Christ served as a member of the Maryland Governor’s Council of Economic Advisers and helped the Urban League by drafting brochures in financial topics with such articles as how to purchase a house with affordable mortgage payments.

At Roland Park Place, he served as a member of the investment advisory and hospitality committees.

He also regularly participated in a weekly protest staged by residents along 40th Street in front of Roland Park Place, where he could be spotted carrying a sign that read “War is not the answer.”

He and his wife were avid catamaran sailors and windsurfers, and since 1933, he had spent summers on Lake Michigan at Williams Grove and Harbert Woods.

Dr. Christ donated his body to the Maryland Anatomy Board, and plans for a memorial service are incomplete.

In addition to his wife and two daughters, he is survived by another daughter, Joan Christ of Seattle; and five grandchildren.

 

Source: The Baltimore Sun, April 26, 2017.

 

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 In Memoriam—Carl Christ (1923-2017)
Comments from Carl Christ’s students, friends and colleagues

From the Department of Economics, Johns Hopkins University webpage:
http://econ.jhu.edu/in-memoriam-carl-christ-1923-2017/

“Carl was a great teacher and mentor. I was delighted that i managed to catch up with him for lunch on my last visit to the US. He had a most significant impact on me and I am sure on so many others. He was what made Hopkins.”

—John Hewson

 

“I was a student of Carl’s in the 1960s. It was an interesting time. Re econometrics, it was a time when it was becoming a more common tool for economists. Carl had just finished his book and was using it in class. I remember complaining about the high word-to equation ratio relative to competing books (by Johnson and by Goldberger). His story was that his book was especially for grown-up economists who needed to learn econometrics on their own and needed more examples and explanations. So it was a book more than a text book.

Three things I still remember that are still important:

  1. He was an early nag about identification- something that faded for a while in the profession, but has come back with a vengeance.
  2. He used to preach that an econometric paper must not only tell the truth and nothing but the truth, but also the whole truth-more appropriate than ever now, in a world of easy data mining.
  3. I recall him once working on a draft of a survey paper on econometrics, and his secretary (there were secretaries then) misread “econometrics” in the title and typed “economic tricks.” He thought maybe that was a better title.

He was both a great scholar and a true gentleman. It is good that he lived so long.”

—Robert Van Order , George Washington University

 

“He was a kind and generous man and as residual claimant served as my thesis adviser for which I am eternally grateful. He may well have been the third or fourth member of the Department to be so engaged.”

—Stuart I. Greenbaum, Prof. Emeritus , Olin Business School, Washington U. STL

 

“Carl was my teacher in the early seventies. I still remember his course vividly. When he started his econometrics course with chapter (7?) on identification stating that the early chapters were background. He also insisted on giving us back his per-book royalty as we all had bought his book.

More recently, Carl invited me to write a piece on Bela Balassa for the New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics which I accepted with pleasure. Even though he did most of the work, he insisted that my name appear first…..

Carl was a great mentor and the life at Hopkins.

When we organized a service for Bela at the Bank, Carl spoke of Bela with great emotion, breaking up in tears when he told us that Bela took the train back to DC to help his daughter with her homework only to come back to Homewood the next morning.”

—Jaime de Melo

 

“Here is another anecdote: when I took Carl’s class in 1992 his book was out of print and Greene (2nd edition!) was the official textbook. However, he lent us copies of his book. He had photocopies for the male students and the original textbook for our female classmates (the rationale was that the hard-copy was lighter to carry than the photocopies).

Like Jim and Bob, I also remember his emphasis on identification and on the economic interpretation of the results. He was a great scholar, teacher, and a true Gentleman.”

—Ugo Panizza

 

“Dr. Christ was my econometrics teacher and Dissertation Advisor in the mid /late 70s. He was amazing. Pieces I remember fondly are

  • His penchant for using every inch and corner of the board before erasing anything… (and side-bets among students about when he’d actually have to bring out the eraser)
  • Carl and Phyllis attending the periodic grad-Department-wide crab outings to Bo Brooks that I organized — with very messy Bay Seasoning-coated hands around red beer cups
  • His being a real person
  • His dedication to swimming / exercise
  • His desire to have people really understand what he was talking about — and instilling in me a real wish to be useful — something that has been a focus ever since.
  • He was my favorite teacher, and a real role model. It was wonderful to know him, and he’ll be missed.

And I use that story about “economic tricks” all the time before speeches I give (:-)).”

—Lisa A. Skumatz, Ph.D Principal , Skumatz Economic Research Associates (SERA)

 

“Many thanks for sending out this very sad notice of the passing of Professor Christ. I had not heard of his passing even though I live in the DC area. He was my econometrics professor at JHU and, although I showed no talent in econometrics, I enjoyed his class very much. He was so enthusiastic in class, and out of class as well. It was really special to see him at the retirement party for Lou Maccini a few years ago.

Professor Christ was a true scholar, and the personification of a great teacher. A truly classy person who, along with several other Hopkins professors, should have received Nobel prizes. I know he will be missed at Hopkins and by many of his former students like me.

Please convey my sincere regrets to his wife.”

—Eileen Mauskopf

 

“I join all of you in expressing my deep gratitude to Carl and in celebrating his life and work. Carl was my professor and thesis advisor (with Bela). I owe them both greatly.

Let me share an anecdote and a comment.

Anecdote. In the late 1960s early 1970s I was an undergrad student of Econ at the Univ of Buenos Aires in Argentina. There was a bookstore in downtown BsAs specialized in imported books on economics, politics, and similar topics… I liked to go there and just look at the books (as a student, my income was limited). One day I was drawn to a green book on econometrics; I felt I had to buy it even though a) it was expensive; b) my econometrics was poor; and c) my English was even poorer to non-existent. Furthermore, I had not heard of the author and I was not planning on leaving my country to study abroad. Still, I bought the book and I carried it with me to the different countries in Latin America and the Caribbean where I lived and worked when I left my country in 1976.

Fast forward several years, and the mystery of why I bought the book was finally revealed: I went to study at JHU, first at SAIS, and then at the Dep of Economics, where, you guessed it, I was the only one in my class with a personal copy of Carl’s famous book. Carl had a good laugh when I told him the story about my (his) book.

Comment. Other colleagues mentioned Carl’s work on identification. I’d like to highlight a related issue: his paper on Pitfalls in Macroeconomic Model Building along with the paper on government budget constraints were two of the most useful applied macroeconomics papers I have ever read. Once I heard someone say that “macroeconomics is national accounting identities plus opinions.” Everybody is entitled to her/his own opinions (on expectations, behavioral issues, market clearing mechanisms, and so on) but Carl made clear that you are not entitled to your own accounting identities, nor can you ignore them. Many policy disasters in developing countries (and some developed ones) happen because policy makers ignore basic double-accounting identities Carl so rightly emphasized (along with the proper matching of independent equations and the number of endogenous variables in a well-specified macro model).

It was a privilege knowing Carl. My thoughts and prayers go out to him, his family, and friends.”

—Eugenio Díaz-Bonilla

 

“Carl Christ’s greatest legacy was far more than celebrated author of “Econometric Models and Methods” – a 10 year undertaking. And far more than several dozen first rate Journal articles. Even more than a first rate teacher willing to tackle undergrad economics courses. It was his very demanding role as a Thesis Advisor par excellence that I consider his greatest Legacy. Demanding his students work to highest standards of scholarship. No matter how long it took. Always willing to read draft after draft with carefully made comments. Carl Christ was a demanding task master. But he was a superb Thesis Advisor and readily accessible. Under his indefatigable energies those of us privileged to be his Thesis students learned the standards of scholarship. It was the greatest of privileges to be his student. His reputation as a sterling Thesis Advisor went well beyond the Hopkins community.”

—Peter I Berman , (1963-67)

 

“I had the honor and privilege to have been Professor Christ’s grad student and TA for the Macroeconomics and Senior Honors Essay. Aside from his outstanding scholarship, I was lucky enough to observe a fantastic and dedicated teacher at work and a wonderful person and humanitarian to boot. Many of us tried and in vain to emulate this role model. When we heard the sad news, some of us were reminiscing about our experiences with Professor Christ.

Not sure how many know this, but beyond the academics, Professor Christ was also an athlete. I recall a sweet and funny anecdote when Kali Rath, Rafael Tenorio and I were teaching at University of Notre Dame in Indiana in the 90’s, and Gabriella Bucci at Depaul University. We received a call from Carl and Phyllis inviting us with our spouses to his summer house at the lake in New Buffalo, Michigan. We arrived at their home and proceeded to walk to the lake, where he wanted to teach us wind surfing. While walking to lake, we were all chatting with Carl and Phyllis when Kali noticed that Carl was casually holding two buckets containing equipment and other stuff for the sailboat etc.. so he insisted that he should help carry at least one. Carl asked “are you sure?” Kali assured him, and so Carl let go of one of the buckets and kept walking to the lake with the rest of us in tow. Suddenly, I realized that Kali was lingering way behind. I went back to ask him the matter and Kali said “Why don’t you try to lift the bucket” I tried and barely managed lift it before dropping it!! It took two of us to lift it and carry it to the lake panting and all, while marveling at how Carl managed to carry two of them and still lead the troops all the way to the lake while carrying on casual conversation with all of us. We had a wonderful day there.

As many others alumni already mentioned, he epitomized what Hopkins is.

He is and will be sorely missed. Deepest sympathies to Phyllis and family and the larger Hopkins one.”

—Ralph Chami , Assistant Director Institute for Capacity Development International Monetary Fund

 

“Dear friends and colleagues,

Carl Christ was a major reason I came to Hopkins. My undergraduate adviser knew his work and my budding interest in econometrics, and recommended that I apply to Hopkins. Little did I know that behind the book-writer was such a remarkable teacher, scholar, and person.

As a teacher, he was instrumental in helping me really understand identification, a concept I had only loosely grasped as an undergrad. His course built a foundation in econometrics that has served a whole generation of Hopkins students well to this day. More broadly than that, his approach to every question or idea in seminars or conversations was couched in terms that students could appreciate.

The depth of his involvement in his field of research was clear. Among other things, he would talk about the inner workings of the various macroeconometric models of the day. With his characteristic smile and a twinkle in his eye, he would relate that the publicized estimates from those models could sometimes be the technical estimate from the model –with a little final “from the gut” adjustment by the lead economist. Not trying to indict anyone, he was rather intending to both give us some insight to the complicated interaction of modeling limitations, the intuition of experienced economists, and policy influence, as well as get us thinking about what really constituted good research practices.

On the personal side, one of my early memories of the graciousness of Carl and Phyllis was the party they held for first-years in the fall of 1976, on election night for Ford vs Carter. Besides it being a wonderful social mixer, they held a little contest for who could pick the winner and his percentage of the popular vote. As I recall, the winner was the wife of one of our non-US classmates – politics has always been a universal language …

It was terrific to see Carl and Phyllis at Lou’s retirement event. While we hadn’t seen each other in a very long time, his memory was keen as always. He quickly recalled not only my first post-Hopkins job but also some of our DOPE softball days! Those are fond final memories.

My heartfelt condolences go to Phyllis and all of their family and friends.

Best regards,

—Richard J. Willke, Ph.D. , Chief Science Officer International Society for Pharmacoeconomics and Outcomes Research

 

“And, yet several more anecdotes.

I remember Carl – we called him Dr. Christ, back then. I was a grad student in the latter part of the 1970s; macroeconomics and international finance were my declared fields.

I remember Carl most vividly for his skillful and intuitive application of mathematical modeling to the greater understanding of macroeconomic theory and policy.

One of my fondest memories of him, was observing how he sat during our general seminars. I remember chuckling to myself, as I watched him, sitting in his chair, his legs folded up underneath him, in the shape of a pretzel. I always marveled at his ability to do that. ?Like the other professors in the department, he was dedicated to his students, the Department, the University, and his profession.

Certainly, one of the great ones!

He will be missed!

My condolences to his wife and family.”

—Milt Pappas, Ph.D.

 

“Carl Christ was an inspiration to me. He was a brilliant economist and very approachable. As a student, I remember that any of the students would walk past his office and he would call out a welcoming greeting to us. My first teaching experience was as a TA for him and I learned a lot from him. I am still a Professor!

Carl, rest in peace and send your blessings to us here on earth.”

—Marianne McGarry Wolf, Ph.D. , Wine and Viticulture Department, California Polytechnic State University

 

” I have just learnt about the sad demise of my most respected Professor Carl Christ. He is the one who offered me the admission with Fellowship to the Graduate Program in Economics at JHU in 1966, was my Ph.D. dissertation major guide along with late Prof Niehans); wrote a rather strong recommendation to my first post Ph.D. employer, IIM Ahmedabad (India), where I served 1970 through until my retirement in 2010; gave a strong recommendation to the Illinois State University, where I served as a full time visiting professor for five semesters at different times during 1982-1990; among several other critical helps. More than these, he was the one who taught me how to conduct research, how to develop econometric models, and how to even draft the thesis in good and correct English language (he corrected the language of the entire first chapter of my thesis and asked me to correct the rest in the same ways). As he was away in England as a Visiting Professor during 1966-67, I missed having had any full course under him, though a lot of my learning in Macroeconomics and Econometrics is due to him. He encouraged me whenever I was upset during my thesis work, helped me even when I had personal difficulties, and arranged my thesis defense shortly after the Commencement as I was keen to return back to India to attend my sister’s wedding. On personal level, he invited me with his family to his house and blessed my wife and both daughters! Such a teacher and guide, rare to find, had been a great boon to me and my accomplishments. Prof Christ, Prof Niehans and Prof Edwin Mills, all at JHU, were great Professors to me! All of them were/are great economists and I have always felt great pride through them.

It has been my great fortune and privilege to be a student of Prof Carl Christ. I offer my humble prayers to the Almighty GOD to grant peace to the departed soul, and courage and strength to the bereaved family to bear this loss. Prof Christ will always remain in my heart and mind through my life. ”

—Girdharilal Saduram Gupta

 

“Carl Christ was an inspiring teacher. I was fortunate to be his research assistant (or one of them) on his econometrics text and in fact am cited in the acknowledgements in the book. It was a great honor to work with him.”

“Good memories of a fine man, Bob (Robert Van Order). I was on campus 1963-65 when he was doing his book (then went off to South Korea and finished the dissertation later on the work there). I do remember to this day his emphasis on identification and am glad you mentioned it.”

—Roger Norton, ’71 , Texas A&M University

 

“The tributes to Carl Christ are really nice to read. I entered Professor Christ’s econometrics class when I arrived at Hopkins, in 1971. The first thing he did was to give everyone a 5 dollar bill, which he told us was the royalty on his book that we had to buy for the class. I was impressed, as were others – indeed, I can still see that scene in my mind even now. Later on, I marked his econometrics assignments, and he became my thesis supervisor. He was a famous scholar of uncompromising integrity with his students and in his own work. By example, he inspires still.

My deepest condolences to Mrs. Christ and her family.”

—Stanley L. Winer , Canada Research Chair Professor in Public Policy, School of Public Policy and Department of Economics, Carleton University, Canada

 

“I was a student at Hopkins 1973-77. Carl taught me econometrics-and impressed upon me the importance of identification and, as a result, structural estimation. I passed his semester of economic tricks, but failed the second semester (with Charley Mallor, I believe). They gave me an oral exam—he and Charley. Carl’s synopsis—“It’s like pulling teeth, but you pass. Just don’t do a thesis in econometrics.” Good advice.

His ability to sit like a pretzel, his good cheer on every day I ever was in his presence, his willingness to slide hard into the catcher at the annual softball game, his obsessively-compulsively organized office (journals were organized like dentin woodwork on a house, with each year’s worth of a journal lined up perfectly, but every other year’s collection pulled forward precisely one inch)—all were memorable. But grad school is an apprenticeship, and Carl was unstinting in his ability–by example and by the gifts of his time—to develop us into fellow professionals.

If there is an afterlife, I’ll bet for Carl it involves him sailing Lake Michigan in the mornings and writing research in the afternoons—as was his wont during the summers when I knew him.”

—Robert A Driskill , Vanderbilt University

 

“Like all of us I have a great memory of Prof Christ. I was at JHU during 1968 to 1972. He was not my thesis advisor, but I had always learned from him in and out of his courses. He was always a great teacher. And one summer I had the privilege of living in his beautiful home, being his house keeper when he was on vacation. When I was returning to Thailand to begin my teaching career at Thammasat University he gave me one advice which I always follow. He said ‘when writing a recommendation letter, always tell the truth’.

I am forever grateful for what he had done for me.”

—Narongchai Akrasanee , Bangkok, Thailand

 

“Thank you everybody for bringing back wonderful memories about Dr Christ who contributed so much in making my Hopkins years (1973-77) so enjoyable.

Like Jim and Ugo put so eloquently, Dr Christ was indeed a scholar, a teacher, a true gentleman and a mentor. He was also a father figure for foreign students like me.

I was very moved to read in his obituary that he “regularly participated in a weekly protest staged by residents along 40th Street in front of Roland Park Place, where he could be spotted carrying a sign that read “War is not the answer.””

We were lucky to have known him and to benefit from his teachings of economic tricks and more importantly from his exemplary behaviour as a teacher and mentor that will always be wit us.

My sincere condolences to his wife and family.”

—Andre Sapir

 

“Fun to read so many tributes to Carl. Certainly, a “man for all seasons”, one who was always civil and professionally courteous in all situations which I can remember in my JHU days. After almost 40 plus years in academic life, I certainly appreciate the witness of Carl’s manner and style of interacting with colleagues and students. A collegiality which we cannot always take for granted, and which we cannot ever underestimate as a value when we recruit faculty in our institutions.

On his teaching and academic advising, looking back, of course, we of my vintage remember well the extensive treatment of identification and of properly-specified government budget constraints in any model, for meaningful policy discussion.

We of the Johns Hopkins diaspora were very fortunately to have him as one of our professors.”

—Paul McNelis

 

“Professor Carl F. Christ was my and Poonsa-nga econometrics professor and Dissertation Adviser in different period of time in the 70’s. He was an amazing scholar, teacher, a true gentleman, a great mentor and the life at Hopkins.

He was liked our father during our wedding and beyond. It was a big opportunity provided by him for Poonsanga to be a postdoctoral fellow at MIT in 1976 and for me to do my dissertation immediately after being a Ph.D. candidate.

I have stayed with him and Mrs. Phyllis three times, first with Poonsanga in Baltimore home in 1982, second I was alone in his summer home with Lucy and her family and the third with my two sisters in their Baltimore home in 2006.

Apart from losing our teacher and dissertation adviser, we have lost our beloved father. He will be in our hearts for ever. Our sincere condolences to Mom Phyllis and their 3 daughters and grandchildren.”

—Poonsa-nga and Borwornsri Somboonpanya Ph.Ds , International Education Travel Co., Ltd. (IET), Bangkok, THAILAND

 

“I have very fond memories of my days as a graduate student at JHU in the 60s.

Carl was a great teacher, a model as a scholar, and a wonderful and unforgettable person.”

—Ernst Baltensperger

 

“Carl lived a long, active and productive life.

I was only on the faculty at Hopkins for a year as a young assistant professor, but Carl was remarkably kind and always prepared to discuss without any condescension and when I came back for a brief visit in 2006 it was as if I had never been away. A true gentleman and a scholar.”

—Alan Kirman , Directeur d’études à l’EHESS, Membre de l’IUF, Professeur émerite à Aix-Marseille Université, Paris

 

“It is great to read the tributes to Carl Christ. I was also a student of his in the early 70’s as well as his TA. He cared about all his students; both the graduate and undergraduate students, and spent a great deal of time with them. As a first-year graduate student, I was assigned to be a discussant on a paper that he presented. When the paper was published, I was listed in the acknowledgements, which was a thrill for a young graduate student – the first time my name was in a journal.

He has been a role model for me as an academic. When I do empirical work, I always think of him and his admonishment that no matter how sophisticated the methods, the work stands on the economics behind it.”

—Susan Vroman , Department of Economics, Georgetown University

 

“I have very fond memories of Carl that go as far back as 1952 when I started my graduate studies at JHU. I took econometrics from him, way before his book came out. The following year Richard Stone was visiting Hopkins and he and Carl organized an evening seminar to read Morgenstern and von Neumann on the theory of games – way before game theory became popular.

The last time I saw Carl and Phyllis was at a conference in 2014. Attached is a photo from that conference of Carl with Takeshi Amemiya, Al Harberger and me.”

—Marc Nerlove , Distinguished University Professor, Emeritus, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Maryland College Park

 

“I took econometrics from Carl in the mid 1970s. I had no idea about his background in physics until I read his obituary. I think this background explains why Carl always thought that there should be no conflict between economic theory and econometrics; they are complementary. This view of economic research was what he imparted to generations of his students. It was his imprint on those of us lucky enough to takes his courses.

He truly was a gentleman and a scholar and as decent a man as I have known. My condolences to his family on their loss.”

—Robert J. Rossana , Dept. of Economics, Wayne State University

 

“Dr. Christ was my graduate econometrics professor and I was his TA for undergraduate macroeconomics in spring ‘92.

As I recall, it was a large class and I assisted Dr. Christ in exam grading and keeping track of records which he all scribed by hand. He was of the generation prior to the internet age, and I remember him being extremely afraid of computer viruses affecting his non-internet ready PC with a floppy disk drive.

My efforts to cajole him into using Excel to add efficacy was futile and I was vetoed with his totally convinced _expression_ that this may infect his computer. I thought it was funny that an intellectual giant of physics and math/stat-intensive econometrics would be so concerned with a computer virus which had almost no chance of penetrating his computer.

He was a great communicator who resonated with undergraduate students. He will be greatly missed.”

—Jongsung Kim , Professor of Economics, Bryant University

 

“I entered the program too late to take Carl’s courses. When I was on the job market, Carl was the one who taught me how to communicate and negotiate with the other side. Maybe that was the time he taught me the real “economic tricks.” When he was very happy to know that I got an offer from U Texas, Carl said, “You see, you are already wearing jeans.” Then he told me the joke that, since Texans are so proud of being the largest state in the contiguous US, Alaskans would split the state in half so that Texas would become the third largest state in the US. I still remember his smile, which I saw several times again since I moved back to Hopkins. Maybe that is the thing that lured me back: an celebrated academic with a warm heart.”

—Yingyao Hu , Professor of Economics, Johns Hopkins University

 

“I was very saddened to hear of the passing away of Professor Christ. I was his student in the early seventies when I was a graduate student at Hopkins. He was a great teacher and a wonderful person. I too remember him returning the royalty money to the students who had purchased the Econometrics textbook. His stress on the Identification problem has stayed with all of us it seems.

Professor Christ was an inspiring teacher, and could set tough exams. He would set an open book final exam and students had twenty four hours to complete it. Most of us had to stay up all night trying to figure out the answers! He was an enthusiastic participant in all department activities, whether dissertation seminars or even Halloween parties!

Professor Christ was also my dissertation adviser,together with Professor Hugh Rose. He was generous with his time, and our discussions were always stimulating and thought provoking. My husband and I stayed with him and his wife when I visited Hopkins for my graduation, and we remember their warm hospitality. Please convey my sincere condolences to his wife, and other family members.”

—Bimal Kaicker Beri

 

“I studied in Hopkins 1966-69, took Carl’s modules on macroeconomics and econometrics, worked as his

A in undergraduate macroeconomics and benefited from generous hospitality at his fine house .

I have nothing but happy memories of my interactions with him during those years. He was brilliant without showmanship, considerate in all matters, diligent and conscientious as a lecturer. He gave us graduate students a deep and long-lasting insight into macroeconomic foundations. I count myself lucky to have had him as teacher and mentor.

There was something quintessentially American about him. He embodied the best of American virtues: openness, honesty, seriousness of purpose combined with optimism and a prevailing cheerfulness. Unlike many other US academic economists he seemed to have a strong sense of place, as witness his enduring devotion to Hopkins.

He was rightly admired as a man of the highest integrity. One of many instances of this stays in my memory. The recommended text for his econometrics module was (naturally and properly) his own textbook Econometric Models and Methods that had recently been published. It was an expensive tome and he was conscious of the tight budget constraint many of us graduates were subject to in those days. He believed it was wrong for him to benefit personally from his choice of textbook. Accordingly everyone in the class who had bought his book was given an envelope addressed in his own hand containing the amount of the royalty he would receive from each sale, calibrated to the last cent.

Thank you, Carl! I’ll raise a glass to you for a good life well-lived.

May he rest in peace.”

—Dermot McAleese , Emeritus Whately Professor of Political Economy, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland

 

“I am deeply saddened to hear the news that Mr. Carl Christ has passed away on April 21, 2017. I join my fellow econ-alumni in offering my condolences to the family and friends of Carl was my teacher and thesis supervisor (with Bela Balaasa and Lawrence Klein (from U Penn) at the Department of Political Economy during 1985-1987. He was not only a kind teacher but also a great human being as he was always willing to help student.

What I liked most about Carl was that he would comment on the papers of the faculty and graduate students during Graduate Student Seminars in a polite yet constructive manner. I never found him being harsh while offering comments. I had the opportunity to interact with Carl on a regular basis, when I was writing my Ph.D. dissertation. His comments were always constructive and improved the quality of my work.

Let me share with my fellow econ-alumni some interesting facts about Carl and my Ph.D. defense. I defended my thesis on August 5, 1987. By then Carl had already left for Beijing to set up JHU Campus in China. My other supervisor, Bela Balassa had to go through 13 hours throat surgery in Washington, D.C on August 4, 1987—a day prior to my defense. He too, was therefore not available during my defense. Larry Klein was in some Latin American Country and had promised to be present at my defense on August 5. By 10:50 am (the defense time was 11:00 am), Klein did not show up at the JHU which made me really nervous, thinking that none of my supervisors would be there during my defense. However, by 10:55am, Larry Klein entered the building of Economic department. I breathed a sigh of relief when I saw Larry Klein with his travel bag entering the department. Bruce Hamilton and Louis Maccini represented Carl and Balassa in my defense.

Before Carl left for Beijing, I had a long meeting with him in his office where we went through the final draft of the thesis. He was very much satisfied with my work which gave me enough confidence and encouragement to defend my thesis, of course, Larry Klein was a great source of strength during the defense. I defended my thesis on August 5, 1987 with minor comments; submitted the revised version within 10 days and left US on August 25, 1987. My thesis defense was a memorable event for me as I defended my thesis in the absence of two of my supervisors (Carl and Bela).

It was indeed a privilege and honor for not only knowing Carl but also being his student. With Carl’s demise, I lost all of my thesis supervisors. The world has lost three great human beings that the God had bestowed on us. May God rest Carl’s, Bela’s and Klein’s souls in peace and give strength to their families and friends to bear this loss.”

—Professor Ashfaque Hasan Khan , Principal & Dean, School of Social Sciences & Humanities (S3H), National University of Sciences & Technology (NUST), Islamabad

 

“I entered Hopkins in 1961, the same year as the second coming of Carl to JHU. When I applied to JHU, I was attracted by the names like Machlup, Domar, and Musgrave, but both Machlup and Domar were gone by the time I entered. Musgrave was still there for two more years, and I learned a great deal by reading his textbook Public Finance. A greatest boost for me, however, was the fact that Carl came back in the same year. He invited me to his office and asked me if I liked mathematics. I proudly answered yes. Then he asked me if I knew differential equations. My heart sagged as I didn’t know them. During the first two years at Hopkins I worked as research assistant to Dr. Edwin Mills in his project on water resources. It was good education for me as Dr. Mills was a man of a very sharp mind. But I was bogged down by the need to study geology of water, which I found extremely boring. Just then Carl came along and suggested I should work on econometrics, which I did. Initially I had planned to finish my dissertation in two years, but as my father became rather ill, I wanted to finish the thesis in one year and go back to Japan with a doctor’s degree and show it to my father. He died two weeks after I came home. I couldn’t have finished the thesis in one year without Carl’s cooperation way beyond his duty. The other members of the committee were Edwin Mills and Geoff Watson, to whom I am also grateful.”

—Takeshi Amemiya , Stanford University

 

“I took Dr. Christ’s course in Intermediate Macroeconomic Theory in spring 1963, and his econometrics course in 1965-66. Dr. Christ was a brilliant and challenging teacher. He always gave each student, who purchased his econometrics book for class, a refund equal to the amount of the book royalty. I have never had another professor do that. During my time in graduate school, Dr. Christ was the Department Chair. In my opinion, he did an excellent job.”

—Alan Sorkin , Ph.D.,1966

 

“As a grad student, I took Professor Christ’s Econometrics course in 1971-72 and also TA’d for him in the undergraduate macro principles course. For someone seeking a career at a teaching institution, as I did, there couldn’t have been a better role model than Professor Christ. He took great pains to make sure the TA’s knew what he would be lecturing on before each class, prepared us for what would be the most difficult material for the students, allowed us (really, expected us) to come up with our own quiz and exam questions, met with us regularly, etc. One day each week he would have lunch in the undergraduates’ cafeteria, just so his students would have a chance to interact with him outside the classroom setting. What a great example he set of a true teacher-scholar! I feel very fortunate to have been mentored by him.”

—Geoffrey Gilbert , Professor Emeritus of Economics, Hobart and William Smith Colleges

 

I once came across Dr. Carl Christ in the hallway when I was still a graduate student. We briefly talked and he was very approachable to me. He gave me a lot of encouragement on economics study and also a few books that I still keep them now. He was a gracious scholar and gentleman.

—Yizhen Zhao , East Carolina University

 

Carl Christ has made a lasting positive difference. He was my thesis supervisor

during my graduate school days at Hopkins (1962-1966). I also served as his teaching assistant in an undergraduate course in economics. I chose university teaching and research as a profession, from which I am now retired. Whenever a student thanked me for my supervision and advice, I smiled in thankful remembrance of my experience with Professor Christ. I endeavoured to pass on the Christ attitude towards students, even though lacking his natural devotion to the cause of education and, above all, his easy ability to detect and direct you, always, to the important details in the analysis or argument. I received prompt and insightful comment when I submitted research to Carl Christ as late as 2004. A resounding thank-you. May the life that Carl Christ lived lessen the family’s grief at his passing.

—John W. Iton , Ph.D.(1966) Retired

 

I would like to mention another way in which Carl Christ was a memorable professor — he was a terrific teacher of undergraduates.

I was an undergraduate at Johns Hopkins (BA ’88), and I went on to graduate school in economics later on. I took Macro Principles with Carl (or Dr. Christ, as I called him then), and Micro Principles with Bruce Hamilton, and both the content of these classes and the personal regard of both professors had a huge influence on me. (And while I’m mentioning it, so did my first TAs, Jonathan Neuberger and Greg Hess.)

Carl was gracious to everyone, but not only that — he took me, as a 19-year-old, seriously. I recognize, now that I am a professor too, how meaningful that is. I got more and more excited about economics the more classes I took, and I ended up taking some first-year graduate classes, including econometrics from Carl, before I left Hopkins. As many of the letter writers have mentioned, his emphasis on simultaneous equations models stayed with me forever after!

I look back very fondly on these formative years that I experienced at Johns Hopkins.

—Leora Friedberg , Department of Economics, University of Virginia

 

Carl and I exchanged holiday cards regularly for more than 40 years, updating each other on our professional, family, and social accomplishments and challenges. Like many of my fellow Hopkins doctoral students, Carl Christ was a friendly, insightful, and demanding professor: certainly one of the great leaders in the department when I was there from 1967-71. Two anecdotes: Our econometrics class was one of the first to use his textbooks. One of the students in the class – not me – off handedly mentioned that there might be a conflict of interest if an instructor required his students to purchase a book that he had written. The next class day Carl gave each of us who had purchased the book something like $2.00 to reflect his royalties. However, his generosity had limits: there was nothing for anyone who had purchases a used copy. Second: At the time I was at Hopkins the department was on the top floor of Gilman Hall. There was a back staircase, and one day after lunch several doctoral students, including myself, decided to race us the stairs from the ground floor. We did this in waves, and not very quietly. At one point, at the top of the landing, we were greeted by Carl, and expected a stern “what are you doing?” or “you are disturbing the peace.” Instead, he simply smiled and asked what was the best time. I suspect that he might have tried to beat it!

—Bruce Jaffee , Emeritus Professor of Business Economics and Public Policy, Indiana University

 

Image Source:  Carl Christ at the Mathematical Economics Conference in Honor of M. Ali Khan in 2013.  From the gallery of pictures at “In Memoriam–Carl Christ (1923-2017)”.

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Exam Questions Johns Hopkins Suggested Reading

Johns Hopkins. Reading list and exam for Economic Fluctuations and Growth. Domar, 1957

 

 

The following macroeconomics course outline with readings and examination questions come from the last academic year that Evsey Domar taught at Johns Hopkins University (1957-58) before he moved to M.I.T.

Note: the last three reading items in section VII (Solow (1956), Solow (1957), and Abramovitz (1956) have clearly been added after the original syllabus was typed (a lighter typewriter ribbon and a larger font were used).

___________________________

THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY

ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS AND GROWTH
E. D. Domar
Political Economy 605
Fall, 1957-58

READING LIST

Students not familiar with accounting are advised to read Mason and Davidson, Fundamentals of Accounting, Chapters 3-5, 9, 13, 17, 21, 25-26, or an equivalent.

The purpose of this list is to suggest to the student the sources in which the more important topics of the course are discussed from several points of view. His objective should be the understanding of these topics and not the memorization of opinions expressed.

Items marked with an * are strongly recommended. (I don’t like to use the expression “required” in a graduate reading list.)

  1. NATIONAL INCOME AND RELATED ITEMS

*Kuznets, S., National Income and Its Composition (New York, 1941), particularly vol. I, Chapter 1.
*Ruggles, R. & N., National Income Accounts and Income Analysis (New York, 1956).
*National Income, 1954 Edition, Supplement to the Survey of Current Business.
*Leontief, “Output, Employment, Consumption and Investment,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, Feb., 1944.
Leontief, The Structure of American Economy (New York, 1951)

 

  1. KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS — GENERAL

Students without prior training in this field are advised to study D. Dillard, The Economics of John Maynard Keynes (New York, 1948), A. H. Hansen, A Guide to Keynes (New York, 1953), or K. Kurihara, Introduction to Keynesian Dynamics (New York, 1956).

*J. M. Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money (New York, 1936), Philadelphia, 1944).
*American Economic Association, Readings in Business Cycle Theory, essays 5, 6, 7, 8.
S. E. Harris, The New Economics (New York, 1947) essays 1-19, 30-33, 38-46.
*A. P. Lerner, Economics of Control (New York, 1944), chapters 21-23, 25.
*K. K. Kurihara, Post Keynesian Economics (New Brunswick, N. J., 1954), essays 1, 11*.
*American Economic Association, Readings in the Theory of Income Distribution (Philadelphia, 1946), essay 24.
L. R. Klein, The Keynesian Revolution, chapters 3-5.
H. S. Ellis, A Survey of Contemporary Economics (Philadelphia, 1948) Vol. 1, chapter 2.
*Income, Employment, and Public Policy, Essays in Honor of Alvin H. Hansen (New York, 1948, essay I.)
*A. F. Burns, “Economic Research and the Keynesian Thinking of our Times,” in his The Frontiers of Economic Knowledge, (Princeton, 1954), or in the Twenty-Sixth Annual Report of the National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc. (New York, 1946). See also the discussion by Hansen and Burns in the Review of Economic Statistics, November, 1947.
Patinkin, D., Money, Interest, and Prices (Evanston, Ill., 1956)

 

  1. THE THEORY OF INTEREST

Readings in the Theory of Income Distribution, essays 22, 23, 26
Readings in Monetary Theory, essays 6, 11, 15
*Haberler, Prosperity and Depression, (Lake Success, N.Y., 1946), chapter 8.
*J. E. Meade and P. W. S. Andrews, “Summary of Replies to Questions on Effects of Interest Rates,” and “Further Inquiry into the Effects of Rates of Interest,” Oxford Economic Papers, No. 1, 1938 and No. 3, 1940.
*J. G. Gurley and E. S. Shaw, “Financial Aspects of Economic Development,” American Economic Review, September, 1955
A. G. Hart, Money, Debt, and Economic Activity, Second Ed. (New York, 1953).
*J. F. Ebersole, “The Influence of Interest Rates,” Harvard Business Review, Vol. XVII, 1938, pp. 35-39.
*H. D. Henderson, “The Significance of the Rate of Interest,” Oxford Economic Papers, October, 1938, pp. 1-13.
R. S. Sayers, “Business Men and the Terms of Borrowing,” Oxford Economic Papers, Feb. 1940, pp. 23-31.
P. W. S. Andrews, “A Further Inquiry into the Effects of Rates of Interest,” Oxford Economic Papers, Feb. 1940, pp. 32-73.
*W. H. White, “Interest Inelasticity of Investment Demand – the Case from Business Attitude Surveys Re-examined,” American Economic Review, Sept. 1956, pp. 565-87.
F.A. Lutz, “The Interest Rate and Investment in a Dynamic Economy,” American Economic Review, Dec., 1945.

 

  1. THE CONSUMPTION FUNCTION

Post-Keynesian Economics, essay 15.
Income, Employment and Public Policy, Essays in Honor of Alvin H. Hansen, (New York, 1948) essay III.
*J. S. Duesenberry, Income, Saving, and the Theory of Consumer Behavior (Cambridge, Mass., 1949).
*B. F. Haley, A Survey of Contemporary Economics (Homewood, Illinois, 1952), Vol. II, essay 2.
*T. E. Davis, “The Consumption Function as a Tool of Prediction,” The Review of Economics and Statistics, August, 1952.
W. W. Heller, F. M. Boddy & C. L. Nelson, Savings in the Modern Economy, A Symposium (Minneapolis, 1953).
*R. Ferber, A Study of Aggregate Consumption Functions, National Bureau of Economic Research, Technical Paper 8 (New York, 1953).
M. Friedman, A Theory of the Consumption Function (Princeton, N. J., 1957).

 

  1. THE MULTIPLIER AND THE ACCELERATOR

*Readings in Business Cycle Theory, essays 9-12.
*Haberler, Prosperity and Depression, chapter 13.
*S. Kuznets, “Relation between Capital Goods and Finished Products in the Business Cycle,” in Economic Essays in Honor of Wesley Clair Mitchell, (New York, 1935).
*R. F. Kahn, “The Relation of Home Investment to Unemployment,” Economic Journal, 1931. Republished in Hansen and Clemence, Readings in Business Cycles and National Income (New York, 1953), essay 15.
*Haavelmo, T., “Multiplier Effects of a Balanced Budget,” Econometrica, 1945; reprinted in Readings in Fiscal Policy, pp. 335-343.
*William A. Salant, “Taxes, Income Determination, and the Balanced Budget Theorem,” The Review of Economics and Statistics, May, 1957.

 

  1. PRICE FLEXIBILITY AND EMPLOYMENT

*A. C. Pigou, “The Classical Stationary State,” The Economic Journal, December, 1943.
*O. Lange, Price Flexibility and Employment, (Bloomington, Indiana, 1944).
*M. Friedman, “Lange on Price Flexibility and Employment,” American Economic Review, Sept. 1946.
*Readings in Monetary Theory, essay 13.
*T. C. Schelling, “The Dynamics of Price Flexibility,” American Economic Review, Sept. 1949.
D. Patinkin, Money, Interest, and Prices (Evanston, Ill., 1956).

 

  1. THEORY OF GROWTH

*E. D. Domar, Essays in the Theory of Economic Growth (New York, 1957), Foreword, Essays I, III-V.
W. Fellner, Trends and Cycles in Economic Activity, (New York, 1956)
A. H. Hansen, Fiscal Policy and Business Cycles (New York, 1941)
*R. F. Harrod, Towards a Dynamic Economics (London, 1951), Part III.
W. W. Leontiev [sic], Studies in the Structure of the American Economy, (New York, 1953).
J. Robinson, The Accumulation of Capital, (London, 1956).
*Simon Kuznets, “Towards a Theory of Economic Growth,” R. Keckachman, ed., National Policy for Economic Welfare at Home and Abroad (New York, 1955)
*Robert M. Solow, “A Contribution to the Theory of Economic Growth,” The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Feb. 1956.
*Robert M. Solow, “Technical Change and the Aggregate Production Function,” The Review of Economics and Statistics, August, 1957.
*Moses Abramovitz, “Resource and Output Trends in the United States since 1870,” American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings, May, 1956, pp. 5-23.

 

Source:   Duke University. David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Economists’ Papers Archive. Papers of Evsey D. Domar, Box 15, Folder “Macroeconomics, Old Reading Lists”.

___________________________

THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY

ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS AND GROWTH
(Political Economy 605, Fall Term 1957-58)

Final Examination—Three hours
January 23, 1958
E. D. Domar

Please answer all questions in any order you like. Your reasoning is more important than your answers.

I. (25%)

(a) Explain the basic economic philosophy which forms the foundation of modern National income (and gross product) estimates in Western countries.

(b) Show how this philosophy is transformed into specific criteria used by the U.S. Department of Commerce in their estimates of GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT, NATIONAL INCOME, AND CONSUMER DISPOSABLE INCOME. Illustrate your discussion with examples.

(c) “Existing methods of computing national income or product exaggerate the difference between the incomes (or products) of advanced and of undeveloped countries.”

Comment fully.

II. (15%)

The following comment was made by Mr. Ayzenshtadt, a Soviet economist, in 1947:

“Even the greatest admirers of Keynes and of his theory that loan capital is the main propeller of the industrial cycle, do not see anything new in it…Keynes himself thinks that the ‘novelty’ of his system lies in the equilibrium formula of the economic process in which the independent and dependent variables are arranged as follows:

Independent Variables:

(1) Propensity to consume
(2) Marginal efficiency of capital
(3) Rate of interest
(4) Liquidity preference

Dependent Variables:

(1) Savings
(2) Investment
(3) Level of Employment”

Comment. Be specific.

III. (15%)

“The best cure against inflation is increased production.” Do you agree? Why or why not? Comment fully.

IV. (25%)

Write an analytical essay on the subject: “The effect of a proportional personal and corporate income tax on the rate or rates of interest.”

V. (20%)

Examine the effect on GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT of a $100 increase in GROSS PRIVATE CAPITAL FORMATION.

(a) Discuss the conceptual and analytical questions involved.
(b) Try to make a numerical estimate

 

Source:   Duke University. David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Economists’ Papers Archive. Papers of Evsey D. Domar, Box 16, Folder “Final Exams. Johns Hopkins, Stanford, U of Michigan”.

Image Source: MIT Museum website

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Economists Fields Johns Hopkins

Johns Hopkins University. Proposal for a course on linear economic systems. Newman, 1968

 

The following memorandum written by Peter Newman, the Johns Hopkins mathematical economist (later turned important historian of economics and co-editor of The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics), provides us with an explicit statement of a theorist’s view of mathematics required of Ph.D. economists in 1968. I find it particularly interesting that no mention of the usefulness of linear algebra for statistics and econometrics was included in his discussion. This memo was found sandwiched in a collection of course reading lists.

________________

DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL ECONOMY

Proposed Graduate Course on Theory of Linear Economic Systems
for discussion on February 21, 1968

  1. The recent abolition of the University’s second foreign language requirement for the Ph.D. has left the Department in a slight predicament. The mathematics requirement has until now served as a commonly chosen alternative to the second foreign language, and so the latter’s abolition places us under some pressure to drop the former. But we would like all our students to have some mathematics beyond one year of calculus.
  2. The situation has at least one more complication. Fulfillment of our mathematics requirement normally requires the attending and passing of courses 16 and 19 in the Mathematics Department. There appear to be few problems with 19 (Advanced Calculus), but there is some evidence that 16 (Linear Algebra) is unsuitable, its coverage varying widely from year to year and often having large parts without much relevance to economics.
  3. I propose the following solution to these difficulties. We should normally require that all students take and pass Mathematics 19. It is better that mathematical analysis be taught by a professional mathematician, and certainly until we have such a person in the Department itself, this course should be taken in the Mathematics Department.
  4. In addition, it is proposed that all students normally be required to take and pass a one semester 3 hour course on linear economic systems. Prerequisites would be only the usual requirements for graduate admission (courses equivalent to our 301-2, plus one year of calculus), and the course would have a 600 number.
  5. The levels of economics and mathematics in the course would be approximately those of Dorfman, Samuelson and Solow’s Linear Programming and Economic Analysis, although this is not in fact a very satisfactory textbook. The course would cover such topics as the following:
    1. Mathematical Tools
      1. Elements of the theory of linear transformations, vectors and matrices, determinants.
      2. Special matrices of particular relevance to economics, e.g. nonnegative matrices, symmetric matrices, positive definite matrices.
      3. Elements of linear and nonlinear programming, with a strong focus on duality theory but little on computational aspects.
      4. Elements of the theory of convex sets and functions.
    2. Economic Theory
      1. Models of Leontief type: Theory, and some empirical applications.
      2. Typical linear programming problems: linear models of production and transportation
      3. Linear models in welfare economics, general equilibrium, capital accumulation
      4. Game theory, including a discussion of Von Neumann-Morgenstern utility index.
  1. It would probably be best if the course were offered each year in the second semester and if it were normally taken by first-year students, who would by then already have had our 601 and Math. 19; this would contribute to the student’s economic and mathematical “maturity”. The course itself could be given by any one of several people in this Department, and the above list of topics is meant only to be typical, not mandatory. If the economic theory were interspersed among the mathematics that would perhaps add to the interest of both, but that is a matter of pedagogy to be decided by the individual teacher.
  2. At the present time only the more mathematically inclined of our students are exposed systematically to the large body of relevant and recent knowledge covered by such a course. Even if we do not agree (a) that we should have any mathematics requirement at all, or (b) that even if we do, such a course in linear systems would be an appropriate part of the requirement, there would still be a strong case for including this course in the catalogue.

Peter Newman

2/13/68

 

Source: Johns Hopkins University, Eisenhower Library. Ferdinand Hamburger, Jr. Archives. Department of Political Economy Records, Series 6, Box 1, Folder 3.

Categories
Amherst Columbia Economists Germany Johns Hopkins Smith

Columbia. John Bates Clark, Faculty Memorial Minute, 1938

 

Memorial minutes give us a snapshot appreciation of a deceased economist by colleagues. One really doesn’t read these to get any new significant items for the biography, one hopes instead to cull some insight into the minds and hearts of those who knew both the person and the work. “Innate modesty and a genuine kindliness” are a pair of expressed recessive traits that perhaps help to distinguish John Bates Clark from brilliant economic theorists of more recent vintage.

This biographical note for Clark from 1894 provides an earlier testimony.

____________________

Memorial minute for Professor J. B. Clark
FACULTY OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
April 22, 1938

 

JOHN BATES CLARK
1847-1938

In recording the death of Professor Emeritus John Bates Clark on March 21, 1938, at the age of ninety-one, the Faculty of Political Science is moved not only by a feeling of loss but also by a feeling of gratitude for great services rendered to mankind.

Born in Providence in 1847 and graduated from Amherst in 1872, Professor Clark set an example followed in the next three decades by scores of young American economists in going to Germany for graduate work. The interests in historical and anthropological studies that he cultivated in Heidelberg and Zürich were lasting characteristics of his mind—a fact often overlooked by commentators upon his later work.

On returning to this country, he began the searching analysis of economic relations that developed gradually into his peculiar contribution to social sciences. A little later than W. Stanley Jevons in England, Karl Menger in Austria, and Leon Walras in France, but quite independently of them and with an emphasis all his own, Professor Clark discovered how the utility of goods influences their values and prices. A collection of his early papers, The Philosophy of Wealth, published in 1885, revealed him as the keenest economic theorist of his time and country.

After teaching at Carleton, Smith, Amherst, and Johns Hopkins, Professor Clark joined this Faculty in 1895. It was while teaching at Columbia that he developed the full implications of his insights. His way of seeking to understand the complicated processes of economic life was to seize upon a set of fundamental factors, and to examine what results they would produce in the absence of disturbing circumstances. Work of this character obviously required logical powers of a high order and constructive imagination. What is less commonly appreciated, to make the results significant the work must be guided by sound intuitive judgments regarding the factors to be admitted to the problems treated and the factors to be excluded. How admirably Professor Clark’s judgment served him and how cogently he reasoned upon the basis of his assumptions were demonstrated by The Distribution of Wealth, published in 1899. That book still stands as the most important contribution of our country to pure economic theory.

Professor Clark’s later books, The Control of the Trusts, 1901, The Problem of Monopoly, 1904, and The Essentials of Economic Theory, 1907, show how effectively he could use his abstract constructions in dealing with practical problems, and how he could bridge the gulf that seemed to yawn between the timeless statis state of his Distribution of Wealth and the ever shifting condition of the work in which real men make their livings.

Of the service that Professor Clark rendered as the first Director of the Division of Economics and History of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, his co-workers in that field can speak with fuller knowledge than we possess. But we may note that no one deficient in a sense of reality, and no one without fervent interest in the welfare of his kind could have planned and carried through as he did the detailed record of the horrible sufferings that the War of 1914-1918 brought upon the world.

With intellectual distinction and integrity there was joined in Professor Clark and innate modesty and a genuine kindliness that won the affection of all who came into personal contact with him. Of what we deem finest in human achievement and character he was an example to be cherished and emulated.

 

Source: Columbia University Archives. Minutes of the Faculty of Political Science, 1920-1939. pp. 825-6.

Image Source: Amherst Yearbook Olio ’96 (New York, 1894), pp. 7-9. Picture above from frontispiece. Another link.

Categories
Economists Exam Questions Gender Johns Hopkins

Johns Hopkins University. Economics Ph.D. Examination Questions for Gertrude Schroeder, 1947

 

From time to time in rummaging through folders in archival boxes, I come across a random artifact that is linked to a old professor of mine, a professional colleague or even a classmate  from graduate school. The Department of Political Economy at Johns Hopkins University wrote Ph.D. examination questions targeted to the individual candidate, as we see in the nine hours worth of examinations taken over two days by then 27 year old Gertrude Guyton Schroeder at the end of September 1947.

Gertrude Elsa Guyton was born in New Mexico February 20, 1920, married twice (first husband: William Schroeder, second husband Rush Varley Greenslade). According to her Washington Post obituary (below), she worked as an economist for the CIA from 1954 to 1969. From 1969 to 1993 she was a professor of economics at the University of Virginia. She died March 30, 2007, leaving an endowment of nearly $10 million to the University of Virginia for international studies (see below).

These 1947 examination questions are interesting as artifacts associated with one of the relatively small number of woman of her generation who pursued Ph.D. studies in economics. My professional connection to Gertrude Schroeder (as I knew her) was as the lead author of a comparative study of US and Soviet consumption à la International Comparison Project (Kravis, Heston and Summers):

Schroeder, Gertrude E. and Edwards, Imogene. 1981: Consumption in the USSR: An international comparison. Joint Economic Committee, US Congress. US Government Printing Office: Washington, DC., 1981.

The purchasing-power-parities published there along with the Soviet personal consumption statistics were an essential ingredient for the calculations in my paper for the Abram Bergson memorial issue, The ‘Welfare Standard’ and Soviet Consumers, Comparative Economic Studies, Vol. 47, issue 2, June 2005, pp. 333-345. I spoke to her only once or twice about her data, and she was indeed delighted that these data proved of use for empirical analysis nearly a quarter of century later.

I was unable to find a picture of Gertrude Schroeder Greenslade for this posting so I figured the quote from Brecht’s Threepenny Opera was appropriate for this former CIA analyst:(with apologies to Bertolt Brecht) “While some stand in the darkness and others stand in light, you see the latter clearly, the former hide in night.” 

________________________

AER Membership Listing, 1970

SCHROEDER, GERTRUDE E., academic, government; b. Albuquerque, N.M., 1920; B.A., Colo. State Coll., 1940; M.A., Johns Hopkins, 1948, Ph.D., 1953. DOC. DIS. The Growth of Major Basic Steel Companies, 1900-1950, 1952. FIELDS 2b, 9, 7d. PUB. The Growth of Major Basic Steel Companies, 1900-1950, 1954; “Industrial Labor Productivity,” JEC, Dimensions of Soviet Economic Power, 1962; “”Soviet Economic Reforms: A Study in Contradictions,” Soviet Studies, July 1968. RES. Soviet Wage Statistics and Real Wages. Economist, various U.S. Govt. Agencies, 1943-48; sr. economist, Dept. of Labor and Dept. of Health, Edn. and Welfare since 1950 [sic, cf. obituary below]; part-time tchg., U. Md. and American U., 1966-68. ADDRESS 3051 Porter St. NW., Washington DC 20008.

Source: Biographical Listings of Members, The American Economic Review, Vol. 59, No. 6 (Jan., 1970) p. 389.

________________________

AER Membership Listing, 1974

SCHROEDER, GERTRUDE E., academic; b. Albuquerque, N.M., 1920; Educ. B.S., Colo. State Coll., 1936 [sic]; M.A., Johns Hopkins, 1948, Ph.D., 1953. Doc. Dis. The Growth of Major Basic Steel Companies, 1900-1950, 1952. Fields 050, 110, 800. Pub. “Consumer Problems in the Soviet Union”, Problems of Communism, 1973; “Recent Developments in Planning and Incentives in the Soviet Union”, Soviet Econ. Prospects for the seventies, 1973; “The Reform of the Indsl. Supply System in the USSR”, Soviet Studies, 1972. Res. A study of the Soviet fin. system. Prev. Pos. Sr. Econs., various U.S. Govt. Agencies, 1943-69; Cur. Pos. Prof. of Econs., U. of Va. since 1969. Address Univ. of Va., Dept. of Econs., Charlottesville, VA 22901.

Source: Directory of Members, The American Economic Review, Vol. 64, No. 5 (Oct., 1974) p. 359.

________________________

Obituary. Washington Post

Gertrude Greenslade, Economist

Gertrude Schroeder Greenslade, 87, an economist at the CIA and the University of Virginia, died of renal failure March 30 at Powhatan Nursing Home in Fairfax County. She lived in McLean.

Mrs. Greenslade was an employee of the Central Intelligence Agency from 1954 until 1969 and worked as a consultant to the CIA from 1993 until her death. She was a member of the faculty at the University of Virginia from 1969 until 1993, when she retired.

She was born in Albuquerque and graduated from Colorado State University. She received two degrees in economics from Johns Hopkins University, a master’s in 1948 and a doctorate in 1953.

Her specialty was the study of Soviet and Eastern European economies. Mrs. Greenslade was fluent in Russian and was a former president of both the Southern Conference on Slavic Studies and the Association for Comparative Economics.

Her first husband, William Schroeder, died in 1966. Her second husband, Rush V. Greenslade, died in 1978….

Source: Washington Post, April 12, 2007.

________________________

Gift to the University of Virginia

Professor emeritus Gertrude Schroeder Greenslade designated the University as the beneficiary of a revocable trust and two individual retirement accounts. Her gift of more than $7 million will support interdisciplinary international studies in the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences.

Source: The Cornerstone Society Report, 2007-2008.

 

Professor donates to international studies
University international studies centers benefit from $9.8 million endowment

By Virginia Terwilliger

The Center for South Asian Studies and the East Asia Center, along with several other international studies programs, recently received more than $386,000 to strengthen and elevate their programs for the 2009-10 school year, thanks to late Economics Prof. Gertrude Greenslade.

Prior to her death in March 2007, Greenslade arranged to leave $9.8 million in an endowment to the University’s international studies programs. Now, those funds are beginning to be distributed to various University beneficiaries, College Dean Meredith Woo said, adding that the terms of the endowment mandate that only 5 percent may be distributed immediately.

The money also will contribute to exchange programs between the University and the University of Rome, […end of webpage]

Source: The Cavalier Daily, October 12, 2009.

________________________

COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION
POLITICAL ECONOMY
[Johns Hopkins University]

Gertrude Guyton Schroeder

Monday morning, Sept. 29 [1947]
Three hours

Answer 3

  1. Prepare an essay on the theory and measurement of productivity.
  2. Compare the development and behavior of American and European unionism.
  3. Analyze the theoretical and empirical relation between economic growth and fluctuation.
  4. Write a review of a book in economics that has appeared since World War II.

 

Monday afternoon, Sept. 29 [1947]
Three hours

Answer 3

  1. Develop the history of banking and of theory about banking; and indicate their relevance to present-day problems and policies.
  2. Explain the theory of interest; what it is, how it gets determined, and what is its significance for economic statics and dynamics. Do not neglect a review of its actual behavior.
  3. Compose a short article on the corporation—its history, legal status, its quantitative position, and its impact on the economy.
  4. What are the major tools of monetary and fiscal policy? Evaluate them.

 

Tuesday morning, Sept. 30 [1947]
Three hours

Answer 3

  1. Set forth the doctrine of comparative advantage using arithmetic models and explaining both the assumptions on which the doctrine rests and the limitations on the conclusion that may be drawn from it.
  2. Write for an hour on monopoly.
  3. Compare on all major points the theories of Alfred Marshall and J. M. Keynes. Show what both these synthesizers owe to earlier thinkers. What ideas of theirs, if any, have been rejected?
  4. In what sense may it be argued that the competitive allocation of resources is an optimum allocation?

 

Source: Johns Hopkins University, Ferdinand Hamburger, Jr. Archives. Department of Political Economy Series 5/6. Box 6/1, Folder “Comprehensive Exams for Ph.D. in Political Economy, 1947-65”.

 

 

Categories
Columbia Economic History Economists Harvard Illinois Johns Hopkins Minnesota Yale

Columbia. Seligman Recommends Three Harvard Colleagues for English Visiting Professorship, 1925

 

The Sir George Watson Chair of American History, Literature, and Institutions was administered by the Anglo-American Society for a distinguished visiting professor to lecture in several English universities. The inaugural lecture was given in 1921 by Viscount Bryce. That lecture, “The Study of American History” was published along with an account of the establishment of the Sir George Watson Chair. The first full course of lectures, “Economic Problems of Democracy” was given the following year by the economist and President-Emeritus of Yale University, Arthur T. Hadley. 

From the following exchange of letters between the president of Columbia University and economist, E.R.A. Seligman, we harvest Seligman’s ranking of four economics professors (three from Harvard and one from Johns Hopkins) regarded by Seligman to dominate the leading specialists in American economic history for this prestigious visiting position in “American History, Literature, and Institutions”. I have been unable at this time to determine who was actually appointed in 1925 or 1926

______________________________

Columbia President Butler Requests E.R.A. Seligman to Propose Names of Distinguished Economists for a British Chair in American History

Columbia University
in the City of New York
President’s Room

January 6, 1925

Professor E. R. A. Seligman
Department of Economics

My dear Professor Seligman

The electors to the Watson Chair of American History in British Universities contemplate acting upon a suggestion of mine and naming in the not distant future a competent American scholar to present the subject of our economic history and development. The topics that I have in mind include the migration West and the settlement of the large land areas there, the development of government aid in internal improvements, the building up of the railway and other transportation systems, the struggles over the tariff, the development, both industrially and geographically, of our manufacturing system, and the growth and character of foreign trade. There would, of course, also have to be treatment, although in general fashion, of the high points of our financial history.

Can you out of your wide acquaintance with American economists suggest a few names that I might send to the electors for consideration when they come to make their choice? The man ought to have enough standing at home to make his appointment abroad significant. He ought to be a good lecturer before a general academic audience and he ought to have a sufficiently philosophic cast of mind to avoid plunging into a morass of facts and statistics when what is needed is philosophic exposition of principles, happenings and trends of events.

With cordial regards an all the compliments of the season, I am

Faithfully yours
[signed]
Nicholas Murray Butler

______________________________

Copy of Seligman’s Response to Butler’s Request

January 7, 1925.

President Nicholas Murray Butler,
Columbia University.

My dear President Butler:

In reply to your letter of January 6th I would say that the professed economic historians are not of the very first rank. The best of them are Clive Day, of Yale, who is, I am afraid, a bit ineffective as a speaker; E. L. Bogart, of Illinois, who is a much more impressive personality and who is a fine fellow, although not a scholar of the first rank; and, finally, Professor Gras, of Minnesota, who is a younger man. It would be far better, it seems to me, to choose some prominent economist, many of whom either give courses in economic history as an incidental matter or who may be assumed to have a competent knowledge of American history. In this rank I should put first Professor E. L.(sic) Gay, of Harvard, with whom no doubt you are acquainted, and who was formerly editor of the Evening Post; then either Ripley or A. A. Young, of Harvard, would do very well, as they are both men of distinction and personality. Other men, like Hollander of Johns Hopkins, occasionally gives courses similar to the one that I give every few years, on economic and fiscal history. Taking it all in all, the order of my choice would be Gay, Young, Ripley, Hollander.

If you desire more detailed information about any of these and their characteristics or standing, I should be glad to talk it over with you.

Faithfully yours,
[E.R.A. Seligman]

 

Source: Columbia University Archives. Edwin Robert Anderson Seligman Collection, Box 37, Folder “Box 100, Seligman, Columbia 1924-1930”.

Image Source: E.R.A. Seligman portrait in  American Economic Review, 1943.

Categories
Bibliography Johns Hopkins

Johns Hopkins. Fiscal Policy Readings. Domar, 1949-50

 

 

 

Evsey Domar was hired at Johns Hopkins in 1948. This posting provides a convenient list of the greatest (English language) hits in the macroeconomics of fiscal policy at mid-twentieth century.

___________________________________

 

Course Announcement

Fiscal Policy 627-628. Associate Professor Domar. Two hours weekly through the year.

Fiscal policy as an instrument of economic stabilization and development. An analysis of its theory and actual applications in recent years.

Prerequisites: Monetary Theory 309-10 and Business Cycles 617-18, or their equivalents.

 

Source: Announcements of Courses, 1949-50. The Johns Hopkins University Circular, New Series 1949, Number 4 (April 1949), p. 92.

___________________________________

 

FISCAL POLICY
Political Economy 627-28
1949-50

It is assumed that the students are already familiar or will familiarize themselves shortly with the following books or their equivalent:

 

Author

Title

Year

American Econ Assn. Readings in Business Cycle Theory

1944

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System The Federal Reserve System. Its Purpose and Functions

1947

Council of Economic Advisers The Midyear Economic Report of the President to the Congress, July 11, 1949, together with a report, The Economic Situation at Midyear 1949

1949

Haberler, Gottfried Prosperity and Depression

1946

Hansen, Alvin H. Fiscal Policy and Business Cycles

1941

Hansen, Alvin H. Monetary Theory and Fiscal Policy

1949

Keynes, John Maynard The General Theory of Employment Interest and Money

1936

Lange, Oscar Price Flexibility and Employment

1944

Lerner, Abba P.

The Economics of Control. Principles of Welfare Economics

1944

National Planning Assn. National Budgets for Full Employment

1945

Ruggles, Richard An Introduction to National Income and Income Analysis

1949

Somers, Harold M. Public Finance and National Income

1949

Whittlesey, Chas. R. Principles of Money & Banking

1948

The following books are recommended:
Arndt, H. W. The Economic Lessons of the Nineteen-Thirties

1944

Beveridge, Wm. H. Full Employment in a Free Society

1945

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Banking Studies

1941

Bopp, Karl R. et al Federal Reserve Policy

1947

Ellis, Howard S. (ed.) A Survey of Contemporary Economics

1948

Fellner, Wm. Monetary Policies and Full Employment

1946

Hansen, Alvin H. Economic Policy and Full Employment

1947

Hansen, Alvin H. & Perloff, Harvey S. State and Local Finance in the National Economy

1944

Harris, Seymour Edwin (ed.) Economic Reconstruction

1945

Harris, Seymour Edwin (ed.) The New Economics. Keynes’ Influence on Theory and Public Policy

1947

Hart, Albert Gailord Money, Debt and Economic Activity

1948

Hawtrey, Ralph George The Art of Central Banking

1932

Homan, Paul T. & Machlup, Fritz (ed.) Financing American Prosperity. A Symposium of Economists

1945

Keynes, John Maynard A Treatise on Money

1930

King, Willford Isbell The Keys to Prosperity. A Symposium of Economists

1945

Lerner, Abba P. & Graham, Frank D. (ed.) Planning and Paying for Full Employment

1946

Metzler, Lloyd A. et al Income, Employment and Public Policy. Essays in Honor of Alvin H. Hansen

1948

Mises, Ludwig von The Theory of Money and Credit

1935

Musgrave, Richard A. et al. Public Finance and Full Employment

1945

Balogh, T. et al The Economics of Full Employment

1944

Rist, Charles History of Monetary and Credit Theory from John Law to the Present Day

1940

Robertson, Dennis Holme Essays in Monetary Theory

1940

Additions to this list will be made from time to time.

 

Source: Duke University, Rubenstein Library. Economists’ Papers Archive. Evsey D. Domar papers, Box 15, Folder “Macroeconomics: Old Reading Lists.”

Image Source: Joshua Domashevitsky (Evsey D. Domar), University of California at Los Angeles, Bruin Life Yearbook/Southern Campus Yearbook, 1939, p. 52. Caption to graduation picture: “Joshua Domashevitsky, A. B./Economics/ Transferred from State College of Law, Manchuria: Foreign Trade Club; Artus, Chancellor of the Exchequer 4.”