From the records of the University of Chicago’s economics department we see that Theodore O. Yntema switched his Ph.D. thesis topic to international trade from “A Study in the Theory of Demand” after eighteen months. He was of course a very distinguished Chicago Ph.D. alumnus from the 1920s.
__________________________
Distinguished Alumni Award
THEODORE O. YNTEMA
AM ’25, PHD ’29
RETIRED CHAIRMAN, FINANCE COMMITTEE
FORD MOTOR COMPANY
Theodore O. Yntema’s ties with the University of Chicago Booth School of Business span more than five decades. After receiving an AB degree from Hope College in 1921 and an MS in chemistry from the University of Illinois in 1922, he came to the University of Chicago where he earned an AM in business in 1924 and a PhD in economics in 1929. His doctoral dissertation, a “Mathematical Reformulation of the General Theory of International Trade” published by the University of Chicago Press in 1932, was considered a classic in its field.
Yntema was a pioneer contributor not only to the development of the Booth School of Business, but also to the whole field of quantitative analysis in finance during the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s. His career furnished a strong bond between the theoretical and analytical facets of finance and its application to modern corporate management.
He served on the faculty of Chicago Booth from 1923 until 1949, when he joined the Ford Motor Credit Company. At Ford, he was vice president of finance and subsequently became chairman of the finance committee. Yntema was a Ford director and chairman of the board for two subsidiaries, Ford Motor Credit Company and America Road Insurance Company.
He was a life trustee of the University of Chicago, a member of the Council on Chicago Booth, a professional lecturer in business policy at Chicago Booth, a visiting professor at Oakland University, a trustee of the Committee on Economic Development, and a chairman of the National Bureau of Economic Research.
The Theodore O. Yntema Professorship at Chicago Booth was established in 1973.
Source: Chicago Booth School of Business / Distinguished Alumni Awards / Honorees / Theodore O. Yntema.
__________________________
Theodore O. Yntema (1900-1985)
A.B., Hope College, 1921; A.M., 1922. and C.P.A., 1924, University of Illinois; Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1929
Theodore O. Yntema became director of research of the Cowles Commission at the time of the move to Chicago in September, 1939. [Olav Bjerkholt points out in his comment below that this is incorrect!] He joined the faculty of the University of Chicago in 1923, and was professor of statistics in the School of Business, 1930–44, and professor of business and economic policy, 1944–49. He was economic consultant in the National Recovery Administration, 1934–35; head of economics And statistics in the Division of Industrial Materials of the Defense Commission, 1940; consulting economist and statistician for the United States Steel Corporation, 1938–40; consultant in the War Shipping Administration 1942; director of research of the Committee for Economic Development, 1942–49; consulting economist for Stein Roe & Farnham, 1945–49; consulting economist, Lord, Abbett & Co., 1946–49; consulting economist, Ford Motor Company, 1947–49; and consultant for the Economic Stabilization Agency, 1951. Since 1940 Yntema has been a director of the National Bureau of Economic Research. In 1949 Yntema joined Ford Motor Company as vice president-finance and since 1950 a director of the Company. He is a Fellow of the Econometric Society and of the American Statistical Association. He is author of A Mathematical Reformulation of the Theory of International Trade, 1932, and co-author of Jobs and Markets, 1946. Yntema also directed most of the research leading to Volume I of TNEC Studies, published by the United States Steel Corporation, and from 1942–49 also planned and directed most of the research leading to the Research Reports of the Committee for Economic Development. [Abstracted from A Twenty Year Research Report 1932–1952].
Source: Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics / From the Archives / Theodore O. Yntema (1900-1985).
__________________________
Petitions for Thesis Subject and Examination by
Theodore O. Yntema, 1926-27
March 15, 1926
Mr. T. O. Yntema
University of Chicago
Faculty Exchange
My dear Mr. Yntema:
At the last Departmental meeting it seemed to the group that the suggested topic “A Study in the Theory of Demand” is satisfactory as a thesis subject.
The fields that you suggested for the examination seemed entirely satisfactory:
- Theory
- Accounting and Statistics
- The Market
- Finance
Yours very sincerely,
LCM:MLH
* * * * * * * * *
The University of Chicago
The School of Commerce and Administration
August 20, 1927.
The Faculty of the Department of Economics:
I hereby petition for a change of my fourth field from “The Market” to “International Economic Policies”. This seems desirable in view of the change in my thesis topic from “A Study in the Theory of Demand” to “A Mathematical Reformulation of the General Theory of International Trade”. My revised list of fields would then be:
- Economic Theory
- Finance
- Statistics and Accounting
- International Economic Policies
[signed]
Theodore O. Yntema
* * * * * * * * *
[To:] Mr. T. O. Yntema
[From:] L. C. Marshall
Nov. 21, [19]27
I am instructed to report to you that the field “International Economic Policies” meets with approval as far as the matter of general principle is concerned.
The next appropriate step is for you to prepare a detailed statement suggesting as precisely as you can what territory you intend to cover and what you contemplate preparing for the examination.
LCM: GS
Source: University of Chicago Archives. Department of Economics Records. Box 38, Folder 1.
Image Source: Hope College. Digital Collections. History of Science at Hope College. 1921; Theodore Otte Yntema; Consulting Economist for Stein, Roe, and Farnham; Ford Motor Car Company; Lord Abbott Company.
2 replies on “Chicago. Economics Ph.D. Alumnus, Theodore O. Yntema, 1929”
An interesting entry on Theodore Yntema is marred by the incorrect assertion in the entry heading that Yntema was research director of the Cowles Commission 1938-1942. The mistake can be traced to the Cowles Foundation website which lists both Harold T. Davis and Yntema as directors (one after the other) in 1938. Apparently it has been found difficult to accept that Cowles Commission had no research director from mid-1937 to September 1939(?).
Areasonably reliable account can be found in
Econometric Theory, 31, 2015, 1–84. doi:10.1017/S026646661400019X
ouch! I have gratefully corrected that error.