The Johns Hopkins Ph.D., Henry Ludwell Moore, was a pioneer in the application of statistics to neoclassical economics. His most famous students were Paul H. Douglas and Henry Schultz.
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[Bibliography through 1930]
HENRY LUDWELL MOORE
1869-[1958]
A.B., Randolph-Macon, 1892; Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1896.
Instructor in Economics, 1896-1897, Lecturer in Political Economy, Johns Hopkins, 1897-1898; Professor of Political Economy, Smith, 1897-1902; Adjunct Professor of Political Economy, 1902-1906, Professor of Political Economy, Columbia, 1906-1929.
Books
Laws of Wages; An Essay in Statistical Economics. New York, The Macmillan Company, 1911. viii, 196 p.
Economic Cycles: Their Law and Cause. New York, The Macmillan Company, 1914. viii, 149 p. [Japanese translation, Tokyo, 1926]
Forecasting the Yield and Price of Cotton. New York, The Macmillan Company, 1917. vi, 173 p.
Generating Economic Cycles. New York, The Macmillan Company, 1923. xi, 141 p.
Synthetic Economics. New York, The Macmillan Company, 1929. vii, 186 p.
Articles
Von Thunen’s Theory of Natural Wages. Quarterly Journal of Economics, Apr., July 1895, IX, 291-304, 388-408.
Antoine-Augustin Cournot. Revue de métaphysique et de morale, May 1905, XIII, 521-543.
The Personality of Antoine Augustin Cournot. Quarterly Journal of Economics, May 1905, XIX, 370-399.
Paradoxes of Competition. Quarterly Journal of Economics, Feb. 1906, XX, 211-230.
The Variability of Wages. Political Science Quarterly, Mar. 1907, XXII, 61-73.
The Differential Law of Wages. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Dec. 1907, LXX, 638-651.
The Efficiency Theory of Wages. Economic Journal, Dec. 1907, LXIII, 571-579.
The Statistical Complement of Pure Economics. Quarterly Journal of Economics, Nov. 1908, XXIII, 1-33.
Crop-Cycles in the United Kingdom and in the United States. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, May 1919, LXXXII, 373-389.
Empirical Laws of Demand and Supply and the Flexibility of Prices. Political Science Quarterly, Dec. 1919, XXXIV, 546-567.
Crop-Cycles in the United Kingdom and in France. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, May 1920, LXXXIII, 445-454.
Forecasting the Crops of the Dakotas. Political Science Quarterly, June 1920, XXXV, 204-235.
Generating Cycles of Products and Prices. Quarterly Journal of Economics, Feb. 1921, XXXV, 215-239.
Generating Cycles Reflected in a Century of Prices. Quarterly Journal of Economics, Aug. 1921, XXXV, 503-526.
The Origin of the Eight-Year Generating Cycle. Quarterly Journal of Economics, Nov. 1921, XXXVI, 1-29.
Elasticity of Demand and Flexibility of Prices. Journal of the American Statistical Association, Mar. 1922, XVIII, 8-19.
An Eight-Year Cycle in Rainfall. Monthly Weather Review, July 1922, L, 357-359.
Economic Cycles. Geographical Review, Oct. 1923, XIII, Sup., 662.
A Moving Equilibrium of Demand and Supply. Quarterly Journal of Economics, May 1925, XXXIX, 357-371.
Partial Elasticity of Demand. Quarterly Journal of Economics, May 1926, XL, 393-401.
Pantaleoni’s Problem in the Oscillation of Prices. Quarterly Journal of Economics, Aug. 1926, XL, 586-596.
A Theory of Economic Oscillations. Quarterly Journal of Economics, Nov. 1926, XLI, 1-29.
Source: A Bibliography of the Faculty of Political Science of Columbia University 1880-1930. (New York: Columbia University Press, 1931), pp. 104-105.
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For more about Henry Moore, see George J. Stigler, Henry L. Moore and Statistical Economics. Econometrica, Vol. 30, No. 1 (Jan., 1962), pp. 1-21.
Image Source: Precedes the Stigler article.