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Minnesota. Interview about banking/financial historians. Heaton, 1955

In an earlier post we are provided with a glimpse of Minnesota professor Herbert Heaton’s wit in his answer to the question “What are economic historians made of?“. In preparing that post, I came across the following 1955 interview that provided some background assessments of economic historians who he judged might have been interesting for a Brookings project on the history of the Federal Reserve System.

A 2007 tribute from the Newsletter of the Economic History Association has been appended to this post for further biographical/career information.

___________________

Backstory to Heaton Interview

In 1954, the Rockefeller Foundation awarded a grant to the Brookings Institution to undertake “a comprehensive history of the Federal Reserve System.” The collection consists of documents gathered or generated between 1954 and 1958, during the course of the Committee’s work.

MA (the interviewer below) was Mildred Adams “a New York journalist specializing in economic affairs”.

“Deputy Treasurer of the United States W. Randolph Burgess expressed his interest in writing a “definitive” history of the Federal Reserve System when he retired from federal service….”

“On January 21, 1954, the Rockefeller Foundation awarded a grant of $10,000 to the committee for an ‘exploratory study of the historical materials relating to the Federal Reserve System.’ The grant was to be administered by Brookings.”

“From January 1954 to June 1956, Mildred Adams served as research director of the project….Meanwhile, however, Burgess had been appointed under secretary of the Treasury and decided that he would not be able to start the planned comprehensive history any time soon. The committee spent the next two years searching for an able economic historian to assume direction of this major study.”

“By the spring of 1956, the committee’s failure to find a qualified scholar and Allan Sproul’s retirement from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and subsequent resignation as chairman of the committee caused problems. With no historian, the committee redefined its goals and requested the Rockefeller Foundation to relieve the committee of its obligation to write a ‘definitive’ major study and instead allow it to encourage smaller, topical studies of the Federal Reserve System.”

Source:  Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. FRASER. Committee on the History of the Federal Reserve System: Guide to the Brookings Institution Archives.

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Notes from interview with Herbert Heaton

June 11, 1955

Internal Memorandum

Interview with Dr. Herbert Heaton, Professor of Economic History at the University of Minnesota

I went out to see Dr. Heaton on a Saturday morning at his home in Minneapolis and found him a charming Yorkshireman with a delightful sense of humor and a wide knowledge of both economics and history. Were he a little younger, he might prove to be the ideal person to do this work, although I have not yet read his books. I discussed the whole project with him in detail and then asked for any suggestions of people he might have for our purposes.

Dr. Heaton confirmed what we have already found, namely that the field is a rather arid one in the realm where history and economics meet. He himself had been on the committee which set up the economic history group with which Professor Arthur Cole of Harvard works. He agreed with Dr. [Walter W.] Stewart that that had rather worked itself out, though he said that the Hidys [Ralph Willard Hidy and Muriel E. (Wagenhauser) Hidy] were doing good work in their chosen field. They are to spend this summer in Minneapolis working on the Weyerhauser Lumber business.

Dr. Heaton said that John [K.] Langum was a brilliant student in the Harvard Business School. He had a minor in economic history and a fine historical sense.

He suggested that we talk to [Charles] Ray Whittlesey of the Wharton School who is interested in banking history. He thought that Whittlesey might have useful recommendations and called him one of the best insofar as historical interests in economic matters are concerned.

He spoke of Herman Kruse [sic, Herman E. Krooss] of New York University as someone who wrote well on financial history. He said that Mr. Kruse had energy, capacity and ability to handle material, but he seemed to think that he was lacking in tact, and he was not quite sure what he might do with an assignment in this project.

A young man named Robert Jost, now at Minnesota doing a doctor’s thesis on the Chatfield Bank, may be a possibility later on in the project, depending on what he makes of the Chatfield Bank. It is a small bank in Minnesota which, for some fortunate reason, has kept all its records and is making a very interesting study.

At the University of Wisconsin Dr. Heaton said that Rondo Cameron was working on the Credit Mobilier in Paris was worth watching. This again is a matter of seeing what he turns out.

He said that [Walter] Rostow at M.I.T., who has been devoting himself to business cycles, would ask the right questions of the material. Rostow has a quick mind and the right range of interests for this project. Oxford and Cambridge had both invited him for next year. His research expert is Mrs. [Anna] Schwartz. His brother [Eugene Rostow] is Dean of the Law School at Yale. In Dr. Heaton’s opinion, Mr. Rostow ought certainly to be explored.

Dr. Heaton says that Arthur Marget is someone he has known in the past as being brilliant on history or theory. He did not know that Mr. Marget had now gone to the Board and wondered if this might rule him out so far as the international sphere is concerned.

He also spoke of Frank A. Knox, who got his Ph.D at the University of Chicago and now writes reviews in the Canadian Journal of Economic and Political Science. Mr. Knox has not published much, but he is worth watching in Dr. Heaton’s opinion.

Dr. Heaton promised to keep the project in mind. He will talk with his associates about it and will send us any other suggestions which come up in the course of his work at the University of Minnesota.

We explored the things which he himself was doing, and he said that he had just turned 65 and did not believe that one should take on these big projects after that age. I had the feeling that he might, however, be interested in the project sufficiently so that he would take a piece of it. I had no authority to discuss it with him at that time, but I think this is worth considering. As a beginning, it might be worthwhile to read his “Economic History of Europe.”

MA:IB

Source:  Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. FRASER. Committee on the History of the Federal Reserve System.

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Past Presidents of the EHA:
Herbert Heaton

Herbert Heaton was one of the founding members of the Economic History Association, serving as one of its two inaugural vice presidents, ascending to the presidency in 1949, and remaining active in the association until his death. Along with E.A.J. Johnson and Arthur Cole, he drafted a grant application to the Rockefeller Foundation, which resulted in a $300,000 award in December of 1940. The grant financed research in economic history over the next four years. Heaton was a member of the original board of trustees of the EHA. Each of the five original members went on to serve as president of the association: Edwin F. Gay (1941-42), Heaton (1949-50), Earl J. Hamilton (1951-52), E.A.J. Johnson (1961-62), and Shepard B. Clough (1969).

Heaton was active in the formation of the EHA and was personally responsible for the recruitment of most of the members from the Midwest. He was an enthusiastic scholar of the evolution and applications of economic history, authoring several articles on the history of the discipline and a biography of Edwin Gay, the first president of the EHA. In an article entitled “Clio’s New Overalls,” published in The Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science(November, 1954), Heaton was one of the first authors to discuss the marriage of clio and its metric partner in regard to the study of economic history. His discussion of the metric side of the equation was anything but enthusiastic however. Instead, he criticized the tendency of young scholars to use technical tools to make precise measurements of what he considered to be inaccurate data.

Heaton was born in England on June 6, 1890, the son of a blacksmith. He studied history and economics at the University of Leeds, earning his B.A. in 1911. He earned his M.A. in 1912 from the London School of Economics before accepting a position as assistant lecturer in economics under (Sir) William Ashley at the University of Birmingham. While there, he earned another Masters degree in 1914. He then moved to Australia and began a post as lecturer in history and economics at the University of Tasmania.

While in Tasmania Heaton developed the study of economics and encouraged research into Australian economic history. His controversial comments on the war provoked the censure of the more conservative elements of the Tasmanian press and public. In 1917 he moved to the University of Adelaide where he expanded the economics discipline and developed the diploma of commerce. Once again his liberal opinions aroused the ire of the conservative business class. Heaton argued that capitalism was the root of all the evils of individual and corporate life. He subscribed to the Marxist belief that capitalism would eventually give way to socialism. Consequently, the university refused to establish a degree in economics while Heaton led the discipline. As a means of preserving his academic career, he accepted a chair of economic and political science at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario in 1925. He stayed in Canada for two years before moving to the University of Minnesota, where he remained until he retired in 1958.

In 1936, Heaton compiled his research on Europe and published the Economic History of Europe, which was for a long time the standard text on the subject. Heaton said that he wrote the book especially for students with no background in economic history. He summed up economic history as the story of how man has worked to satisfy his material wants, in an environment provided by nature, but capable of improvement, in an organization made up of his relations with his fellows, and in a political unit whose head enjoys far-reaching power to aid, control, and appropriate. Such lofty views of the discipline were what made Heaton such a dedicated and valuable member of the Economic History Association.

Herbert Heaton died on January 24, 1973 in Minneapolis, survived by his three Australian-born children and his wife Marjorie Edith Ronson. He was an active scholar to the end of his life, publishing his ninth and final article in the JEH in June of 1969, nearly 28 years after his first JEH appearance.

Sources

Archives of the Economic History Association, Hagley Museum, Wilmington, DE.

Blaug, Mark, ed., Who’ s who in economics: a biographical dictionary of major economists, 1700-1986, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1986, 2nd ed.

Bourke, Helen, “Heaton, Herbert (1890-1973),” Australian Dictionary of Biography, Vol. 9, Melbourne: Melbourne University Press, 1983, pp. 250-251.

Cole, Arthur H., “Economic History in the United States: Formative Years of a Discipline,” The Journal of Economic History, Vol. 28, No. 4 (Dec., 1968), pp. 556-589.

de Rouvray, Cristel, “‘Old’ Economic History in the United States: 1939- 1954,” Journal of the History of Economic Thought, Vol. 26, No. 2 (June, 2004), pp. 221-39.

Harte, N.B., “Herbert Heaton, 1890-1973: A Biographical Note and a Bibliography [Obituary],” Textile History Vol. 5 (1974), p. 7.

Payne, Elizabeth, “Herbert Heaton,” term paper for Professor Robert Whaples, Wake Forest University, 2006.

Selected writings of Herbert Heaton

“Heckscher on Mercantilism,” The Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 45, No. 3 (June, 1937), pp. 370-93.

“Rigidity in Business Since the Industrial Revolution,” The American Economic Review, Vol. 30, No. 1, Part 2, Supplement, Papers and Proceedings of the Fifty-second Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association (Mar., 1940), pp. 306-313.

“Non-Importation, 1806-1812,” The Journal of Economic History, Vol. 1, No. 2 (Nov., 1941), pp. 178-98.

“The Early History of the Economic History Association,” The Journal of Economic History, Vol. 1, Supplement: The Tasks of Economic History (Dec., 1941), pp. 107-09.

“Recent Developments in Economic History,” The American Historical Review, Vol. 47, No. 4 (July, 1942) pp. 727- 46.

“The Making of an Economic Historian,” The Journal of Economic History, Vol. 9, Supplement: The Tasks of Economic History (1949), pp. 1-18.

“Clio’ s New Overalls,” The Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science, Vol. 20, No. 4 (Nov., 1954), pp. 467-77.

“Twenty-Five Years of the Economic History Association: A Reflective Evaluation,” The Journal of Economic History, Vol. 25, No. 4 (Dec., 1965), pp. 465-79.

Modern economic history, with special reference to Australia, Melbourne: Macmillan & Co., 1925.

A history of trade and commerce, with special reference to Canada, Toronto: T. Nelson & Sons, 1928.

The British Way to Recovery: Plans and Policies in Great Britain, Australia, and Canada, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1934.

Economic History of Europe, New York: Harper, 1948.

A Scholar in Action, Edwin F. Gay, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1952.

 

Source: Past Presidents of the EHA: Herbert Heaton, The Newsletter of the Economic History Association (ed. Michael Haupert), No. 31 (December 2007), pp. 16-18.

Image SourceNewsletter of the Economic History Association, No. 31 (December 2007), p. 16.

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Princeton Suggested Reading Syllabus

Princeton. Reading assignments. Graduate International Trade. F.D. Graham and C.R. Whittelsey, 1930-34

 

For this post Economics in the Rear-view Mirror has transcribed the reading assignments for Princeton’s graduate course “International Trade Theory” for the academic years 1930-31 (F. D. Graham), 1931-32 (C. R. Whittlesey), and 1933-34 (F. D. Graham). The typed lists come from Frank W. Fetter’s papers at the Economists’ Papers Archive of Duke University and are found in a folder along with Fetter’s handwritten notes for the course in 1932-33 that was taught by Graham.

Frank W. Fetter and C. R. Whittlesey co-taught the companion course, Economics 526 “International Economic Policies” during the second semester of 1933-34.

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Graduate Course in International Trade.
Assignments, 1930-31
F. D. Graham

Bastable: Theory of Foreign Trade.

Mun: Englands Treasure by Forraign Trade.
A. Smith: Book II, Ch. 5; Bk. IV, Chs. 1, 2, 3.

Ricardo: Chs. 17, 19, 22.
Mill: Chs. 17, 18, 19, 21.

Cairnes: Part III, 1, 2, 3, 5.
Graham: QJE 1924, Theory of International Values Reexamined

Marshall: Money, Credit and Commerce, Bk III.
Taussig: International Trade.

Graham: QJE, Some Aspects of Protection.
Knight: Criticism of Graham and reply, QJE.

Marshall: Appendix.
Pigou: Protective and Pref. Import Duties.
Dietzel: Retaliatory Duties, Omit Ch. III.

Angell: Theory of International Prices, to p. 199.

Patten: Economic Basis of Protection.
Angell: Theory of International Values, Continental Th. Hist.

Taussig: Readings in International Trade—Wagner, Schuller International Trade, chs. 11, 12, 13.
Viner: Dumping, first (theoret.) part
Graham: Review of Dumping.

Viner: Canada’s Balance of International Indebtedness (omit techni. Part)
Taussig: Int. Trade Under Deprec. Paper, QJE 1917
Graham: Do QJE 1922

Goschen: Foreign Exchange
Cassel: Money & Foreign Exchange. P.P.P. notion
Graham: Self-limiting and Self-inflammatory movements QJE 1929
Germany’s Capacity to Pay. AER June 1925

Pigou: Some Problems of Foreign Exchange, Econ. J. 1920.
League of Nations Papers: Brussels Fin. Conf., entitled “Exchange Control”

Graham: The Young Plan, Alumni Weekly
_______: Exchange, Prices, and Production (omit Part III)

 

Source: Duke University. David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Economists’ Papers Archive. Frank Whitson Fetter Papers, Box 55, Folder “Teaching. Ec-International Trade Theory (Princeton University) Assignments, Syllabi, notes, 1930-1934”.

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Graduate Course in International Trade.
Assignments, 1931-32
C. R. Whittlesey

Mun: England’s Treasure by Forraign Trade.
A. Smith: Wealth of Nations, Book II-5; Bk. IV-1, 2, 3.

Ricardo: Chs. 17, 19, 22.
Mill: Bk. III, chs. 17, 18, 19, 21.
Cairnes: Part III, chs. 1, 2, 3.

Nassau Senior: On the Cost of Obtaining Gold, 35 pp.
Bastable: Theory of Foreign Trade.

Taussig: International Trade.
Marshall: Money, Credit and Commerce, Bk III.

Graham: Theory of International Values Reexamined, Q.J.E., Nov. 1923.
C.R.W.: Foreign Investment & Terms of Interchange.
Williams, J.H.: The Theory of International Trade Reconsidered. Economic Journal, June 1929, pp. 195-209.

Whittlesey: Article on Stevenson Plan.
Patten: Economic Basis of Protection.
Graham: Some Aspects of Protection Further Considered. Q.J.E. Feb. 1923
Knight: Criticism. Q.J.E. August 1924.
Graham: Reply and Rejoinder. Feb. 1925
Broster, E.J. Proposal for a Scientific Tariff. Econ. Journ. June 1931, 313-16.

Wagner: Agrarian vs. Mfg. State in Taussig: Readings (ch. 13)
Brentano: Terrors of Industrial State in Taussig: Readings (ch. 15)
Dietzel: Retaliatory Duties (whole book)
Pigou: Protective and Preferential Duties.

Viner: Dumping. (Theoretical part) pp.
Graham: Review. June 1924, A.E.R., pp. 321-4

Keynes: Treatise on Money, last ch. Of Vol I
Taussig: Trade Under Depreciated Paper, Q.J.E., May 1917, pp. 380
Graham: Trade Under Depreciated Paper, Q.J.E., Feb. 1922, pp. 220-73
Zapoleon: International & Domestic Commodities and the Theory of Prices, Q.J.E. May 1931, pp. 409-59.
Viner: Canada’s Balance of International Indebtedness. Introduction and Part II.
Graham: Classical Economists and Theory of International Trade.

Viner: Canada’s Balance of International Indebtedness. Introduction and Part II.
Goschen: Foreign Exchange.
Graham: Hyper-Inflation, pp. 97-99; 113-49.
Cassel: Money and Foreign Exchange After 1914. pp. 137-202.
Graham: Germany’s Capacity to Pay and the Reparation Plan. A.E.R. June 1925.

N. Senior: On the Transmission of the Precious Metals.
Pigou: Some Problems of Foreign Exchange, Econ. Jour., Dec. 1920, pp. 460-72.
Thomas: Government Control of Foreign Exchange Abroad. Annalist, 11-27-31, pp. 869-71.
League of Nations: Exchange Control (Brussels Finance Conf.)
Baster, A.S., Jr.: A note on Australian Exchange. Econ. Jour., Sept. 1930, pp. 466-71.

Graham: Hyper-Inflation (all the rest)

Angell: Theory of International Prices.

Source: Duke University. David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Economists’ Papers Archive. Frank Whitson Fetter Papers, Box 55, Folder “Teaching. Ec-International Trade Theory (Princeton University) Assignments, Syllabi, notes, 1930-1934”.

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List of Readings in International Trade Theory.
1933-34
[F. D. Graham’s Course, Princeton]

Comparative Costs and International Values.

Mun: England’s Treasure by Foreign Trade.
Cantillon: Essai sur la nature In commerce in general
Smith: Wealth of Nations, Book II, ch. 5; Bk. IV, ch. 1, 2, 3.
Ricardo: Principles, chs. 17, 19, 22.
Mill: Principles, Bk. III, chs. 17-22.
Senior: Cost of Obtaining Money
Cairnes: P.E. Part III.
Bastable: International Trade.
Graham: Theory of Int. Values Reex., Q.J.E., 1923.
______: Theory of Int. Values, Q.J.E., 1932.
Ohlin, Interregional and Int. Trade.
Angell, J.W. Theory of Int. Values: Selections
Taussig, F.W. International Trade.
Viner, J. Doctrine of Comparative Costs, Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv, Oct. 1932
Marshall: Money, Credit and Commerce, Bk III and Appendices, F, G, N, J.
Edgeworth: Pure Theory of Int. Values in Papers.

Monetary Mechanism

Senior: Distribution of Precious Metals.
Cairnes: The Australian Episode
Taussig: Int. Trade under Deprec. Paper, Q.J.E. 1917
Graham: Int. Trade under Deprec. Paper—the U.S., Q.J.E. 1922
______: Exchange, Prices and Prod. Selections
______: The Fall in the Value of Silver, etc. J.P.E. 1931
Viner, J. Canada’s Balance of Payments.
Goschen: Foreign Exchange.
Angell, J.W. Theory of Int. Prices.

Protection

Patten: Economic Basis of Protection
Taussig: Readings in Int. Trade: Schüller, etc.
Dietzel: Retaliatory Duties
Pigou: Protective and Preferential Import Duties.
Copland & others:
Graham: Protective Tariffs
______: Some Aspects of Protection Further Consid. Q.J.E. 1922

Special Problems

Viner: Dumping
Wallace & Edminster: Int. Control of Raw Materials

Foreign Investment

Whittlesey: Foreign Investment and Terms of Trade.
Wilson: Capital Exports and the Terms of Trade.

Source: Duke University. David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Economists’ Papers Archive. Frank Whitson Fetter Papers, Box 55, Folder “Teaching. Ec-International Trade Theory (Princeton University) Assignments, Syllabi, notes, 1930-1934”.

Image Sources: Princeton University yearbook Bric-A-Brac. Frank D. Graham (1942) and C. R. Whittlesey (1938).

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Princeton Suggested Reading Syllabus

Princeton. Syllabus for International Economic Policies. F.W. Fetter and C.R. Whittlesey, 1934

 

The Princeton course “International Economic Policies” was co-taught by Charles R. Whittlesey and Frank W. Fetter in 1934. Biographical material from their respective archival papers guides and the course syllabus are included in this post.

______________

Frank Whitson Fetter
(1902-1992)

1899, May 22—Born, San Francisco, Calif.
1916—Graduate of Princeton High School, Princeton, NJ
1920 A.B.—Political Science, Swarthmore College (Phi Beta Kappa)
1922 A.M.—Princeton University
1924 A.M.—Harvard University
1926 Ph.D.—Economics, Princeton University
1928-1934—Assistant Professor and Professor of Economics, Princeton University
1929, Jan. 14—Married Elizabeth Pollard (d. 1977)
1934—Member of Commission on Cuban Affairs, organized by the Foreign Policy Association
1934-1948—Associate Professor and Professor of Economics, Haverford College
1937-1938—Guggenheim fellowship (Research on banking in Great Britain)
1939—summer Economist for the Export-Import Bank of Washington
1940—summer Economic Advisor to the Central Bank of Ecuador
1943-1946—Economic Advisor with the Lend-Lease Administration and the Department of State; ten months spent in India
1948-1967—Professor of Economics, Northwestern University
1950—summer Advisor to the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development
1951—summer Advisor to the Department of State, Division of German Affairs, and member of the American Delegation to London for the Preliminary Conference on German Debts
1967-1968—Visiting Haney Professor, Dartmouth College
1978, Apr.—Married Elizabeth Miller Stabler (d. 1985)
1991—Died

Source: Duke University. David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Economists’ Papers Archive. Guide to the Frank Whitson Fetter Papers.

______________

 Charles Raymond Whittlesey
(1900-1979)

Economist, author and educator; B.A., Philomath College, (1921), M.A., American U. of Beirut, (1924) and Ph.D., Princeton U., (1928) [dissertation: Government Control of the Crude Rubber Industry. The Stevensen Plan. Published by Princeton University Press, 1931]; faculty, Princeton U., (1925-1940); faculty, Wharton School, U. of Pennsylvania, (194-1967); chairman, Dept. of Finance, (1945-1952, 1960-1963); economist for Penn Mutual Insurance Co. (1941-1961); specialist in monetary economics and monetary policy.

Source:  University of Pennsylvania Archives. Webpage Papers of Charles Raymond Whittlesey, 1928-1974.

______________

Economics 526. (International Economic Policies.)
– 1934 –

Date

Topic

Readings

Feb. 14 (CRW) Valorization Wallace and Edminster, International Control of Raw Materials. (Omit ch. 8 and Appendix).
Feb. 21 (CRW) Valorization 1.     C. R. Whittlesey, The Stevenson Plan, Journal of Political Economy, August 1931, pp. 506-25;

2.     Jacob Viner, Control of Raw Materials, Foreign Affairs, July 1926;

3.     F. Rowe, Studies in Artificial Control of Raw Materials, #3. Coffee;

4.     Senate Document 70, 73d Congress, 1st Session, World Trade Barriers in Relation to American Agriculture, pp. 1-141;

5.     T.T.Read, Valorization in the Mineral Industry, Political Science Quarterly, June 1932, pp. 234-241.

6.     Department of Commerce, Foreign Combines to Control Prices of Raw Materials, T. 1B. #385, 1926.

7.     W. S. Colbertson, Raw Materials and Foodstuffs in the Commercial Policies of Nations, Annals of Am. Acad. of Pol. and Soc. Science, March, 1924.

8.     J. Pedersen. Economic Stabilization in Economic Essays in Honour of Gustav Cassel, 1936.

9.     Reports by students on various aspects of Valorization.

Feb. 28 (FWF) Foreign Trade Monopolies and Commercial Treaties 1.     E.Lipson, An Introduction to the Economic History of England,
vol. 1, ch. 10 (Foreign Trade)
vol. 2, pp. 184-315 (Foreign Trade).2.     Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, Book IV, ch. 6 (Of Treaties of Commerce).3.     U.S.Tariff Commission, Reciprocity and Commercial Treaties, pp. 389-450.4.     Vernon Seltzer, Did Americans Originate the Conditional Most Favored Nation Clause, Journal of Modern History, Sept. 1933.
March 7 (FWF) Reciprocity 1.     U.S. Tariff Commission, Reciprocity and Commercial Treaties, Conclusions and Recommendations, pp. 9-47.

2.     U. S. Tariff Commission, Effects of the Cuban Reciprocity Treaty, Summary and Conclusions, pp. 1-26.

3.     W. S. Culbertson, America’s New Commercial Policy, Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. 38, Feb. 1924, pp. 352-357.

4.     League of Nations—Documentation of International Economic Conference of 1927 on “Discriminatory Tariff Classifications” and “European Bargaining Tariffs.”

5.     Reports by members of class, on: Canadian Reciprocity, Contingent Duties, Hawaiian Reciprocity, Tariff Bargaining under 1890 Act, Tariff Bargaining under 1897 Act.

March 14 (FWF) Colonial Tariff Policies 1.     U.S. Tariff Commission, Colonial Tariff Policies, pp. 1-78, 571-629.

2.     U.S. Tariff Commission, U.S. Philippine Tariff and Trade Relations, pp. 1-52

March 21 (FWF) British Tariff Policy and Colonial Preference 1.     Dunham, The Anglo-French Treaty of Commerce of 1860, ch. 1.

2.     W.J.Ashley, The Tariff Problem, Introduction and ch. 1-6.

3.     U.S.Tariff Commission, Colonial Tariff Policies, ch. 12, 13, 18.

4.     H.V.Hodson, Before Ottawa, Foreign Affairs, vol. 10, pp. 588-599.

5.     J.M.Macdonnell, After the Ottawa Conference, Foreign Affairs, Vol. 11, pp. 331-346.

March 28 (CRW) Dumping 1.     Jacob Viner, Dumping, pp. 1-329.

2.     Article on Dumping in Encyclopaedia of Soc. Sci.

3.     Sen. Doc. Anti-Dumping Legislation [Perhaps: Emergency Tariff and Antidumping. Hearing before the Committee on Finance, United States Senate, April, 1921]

April 11 (CRW) Quotas and Exchange Control 1.     World Trade Barriers in Relation to American Agriculture, pp. 1-141.

2.     E.B.Dietrich, French Import Quotas, American Economic Review, Dec. 1933.

3.     C.R.Whittlesey, Exchange Control, American Economic Review, Dec. 1922.

April 18 (CRW) Quotas and Exchange Control 1.     W.H.Beveridge, Tariffs, The Case Examined. ch. 7, 9-18, and Appendix.

2.     Economist, Feb. 24, 1934, Clearing Agreements, pp. 405-6.

3.     U.S. Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, T. 1B. #812, Foreign Tariffs and Commercial Policy during 1932.

April 25 (FWF) Bounties and Subsidies 1.     D.G.Barnes, A History of the English Corn Laws, ch. 1-3.

2.     Josef Gruzel, Economic Protectionism, pp. 163-179, 200-231.

3.     Griffin, The Sugar Industry and Legilation in Europe, Q.J.E., vol. 17, pp. 1-43.

4.     F.W.Taussig, The End of the Sugar Bounties, Q.J.E., vol. 18, pp. 130-4.

5.     P.T.Cherington, State Bounties and the Beet Sugar Industry, Q.J.E., V. 26, pp. 381-386.

6.     League of Nations—Documentation of International Economic Conference, Direct and Indirect Subsidies, pp. 8-22.

7.     U.S. Tariff Commission, Preferential Transportation Rates, pp. 9-52

8.     Review, pp. 72-84 in World Trade Barriers in Relation to American Agriculture.

May 2 (CRW) Shipping Subsidies 1.     Dunmore, Ship Subsidies.

2.     U.S.Shipping Board, History of Shipping Discriminations.

3.     Nat. Inds. Conf. Bd: Amer. Merchant Marine Problem. Omit chs. 2-6.

4.     Grovenor M. Jones: Government Aid to Merchant Shipping, pp. 7-29; 257-84; 427-68.

May 9 (FWF) Control of Foreign Investments 1.     Herbert Feis, Europe, the World’s Banker. ch. 1-6.

2.     L.H.Jenks, The Migration of British Capital to 1875. ch. 9.

3.     T.E.Gregory, Foreign Investments and British Public Opinion, in Foreign Investments, by Cassell and others, pp. 97-119.

4.     Carter Glass, Government Supervision of Foreign Loans, Proceedings of The American Academy of Political Science, vol. xii, Jan. 1928, pp. 843-849.

5.     Charles P. Howland, Our Repudiated State Debts, Foreign Affairs, vol. 6, April 1928, pp. 395-407.

6.     John Foster Dulles, Our Foreign Loan Policy, Foreign Affairs, vol. 5, Oct. 1926, pp. 33-48.

May 16 (FWF and CRW) Present Day American Commercial Policy 1.     U.S. Tariff Commission, Methods of Valuation, pp. 1-43.

2.     U.S.Tariff Commission, Regulation of Tariffs by Administrative Action, Passim.

3.     Report of Ways and Means Committee on Reciprocal Trade Agreements Bill (House Report 1000, 72d Congress, 2d Session).

4.     Reciprocal Trade Agreements, Hearings before Ways and Means Committee on H.R. 8430.

a.     Testimonies of Hull, pp. 1-45

b.     Testimonies of Dickinson, pp. 183-227.

c.     Testimonies of Sayre, 293-319, 333-382, 387-389.

d.     Letters, pp. 282-286.

 

Source:  Duke University. David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Economists’ Papers Archive. Frank Whitson Fetter Papers, Box 55, Folder “Teaching Ec 526 International Economic Policies (Princeton University)”.

Image Sources:  Frank W. Fetter (left) (ca. 1937) John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation; Charles R. Whittlesey (right), Princeton Yearbook, Bric-a-Brac, 1939