On "Weltwirtschaftslehre":
"The term "world economy" (_Weltwirtschaft_) first appeared in Germany on
the eve of World War I, when Kaiser Wilhelm II was preparing to challenge
the political and economic domination of the British Empire. It was at
about the same time that the German economist Bernhard Harms, with the
backing of Germany's newly created steel and heavy-chemical industries,
founded the Institute for World Economics at Kiel [_Institut fuer
Weltwirtschaft und Seevekehr_], the first large institution devoted to
economic research on a global scale. These two signs of impending change
proved to be reliable. Over the next 60 years Germany would lose two wars,
Britain would lose its empire and the notion of a world composed of self
sufficient, autonomous national economies would recede into the realm of
conventional abstractions."
from Wassily W. Leontief, "The World Economy of the Year 2000",
_Scientific American_, September 1980. (Leontief spent a couple of years at
the Institute, where he finished his dissertation.)
Other economists associated with the Institute in the interwar years
included
Adolph Lowe (its Director of Research and founder and leader of its
Department of International Business Cycle and World Industrialization
Research), Jacob Marschak, Gerhard Colm, Hans Neisser, F. A. Burchardt, and
Alfred Kaehler.
For more on the Institute in this period, see:
Clark, David, 1984: "Confronting the Linear Imperialism of the Austrians:
Lowe's Contribution to Capital and Growth Theory", _Eastern Economic
Journal_, 10, 2, pp. 107-27.
Garvy, George, 1975: "Keynes and the Economic Activists of Pre-Hitler
Germany", Journal of Political Economy, 83, 2, pp. 391-405
Hagemann, Harald, 1990: "The Structural Theory of Economic Growth", in M.
Baranzini and R. Scazzieri (eds.): _The Economic Theory of Structure and
Change_, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
----------------, 1995: "Hayek and the Kiel School: Some Reflections on the
German Debate on Business Cycles in the late 1920s and Early 1930s", in M.
Colonna and H. Hagemann (eds.): _Money and Business Cycles: The Economics
of F. A. Hayek_ Volume I, London: Edward Elgar.
Krohn, Claus-Dieter, 1983: "An Overlooked Chapter of Economic Thought: The
'New School's' Effort to Salvage Weimar's Economy", _Social Research_, 50,
2, pp. 452-68.
-------------------, 1993[1987]: _Intellectuals in Exile: Refugee Scholars
and the New School for Social Research_, Amherst: University of
Massachusetts Press.
Lowe, Adolph, 1959a: "F.A. Burchardt, Part I: Recollections of his Work in
Germany", _Bulletin of the Institute of Statistics_, 21, pp. 59-65.
___________________________________
Mathew Forstater Department of Economics
Gettysburg College Gettysburg, PA 17325
tel: (717) 337-6668 fax: (717) 337-6251 e-mail: [log in to unmask]
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