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Published by EH.NET (December 2002)
Anthony M. Endres and Grant A. Fleming, _International Organizations and
the Analysis of Economic Policy, 1919-1950_. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 2002. xiv + 290 pp. $65 (hardcover), ISBN: 521-79267-3.
Reviewed for EH.NET by D.E. Moggridge, Department of Economics, University
of Toronto. <[log in to unmask]>
The purpose of this book is to explore the intellectual contributions of
economists who worked in or were consultants to important international
organizations between 1919 and 1950. The organizations in question are the
International Labour Organization, the Economic and Financial Section of
the League of Nations, the Bank for International Settlements and, after
1945, some parts of the United Nations. In looking at these, the authors
are concerned to address five questions: "what was distinctive, innovative
and significant in a doctrinal history sense about research"; "what policy
questions stimulated the research undertaken and what policy position
flowed from the research"; "what intellectual influences acted on that
research"; how did the research relate to prevailing orthodoxies and
changes therein; and "what limitations can be identified in the economics
as practised ... in these organizations" (pp. 7-8). The book proceeds by
topic: business cycles, monetary policy, public investment policy, trade
policy, social economics, international finance and the full employment
movement of the late 1940s. However its coverage is occasionally
unexpectedly narrow: its discussion of late 1940s Keynesianism does not
extend to national accounting, presumably because the individuals
concerned, one of whom received a Nobel Prize in Economics for his work,
were called "statistical experts" and thus not considered economists.
Despite the authors' claims for broad institutional coverage, their most
serious archival research centers on the International Labour Organization,
with the Economic and Financial Section receiving less attention and the
Bank for International Settlements receiving none. (All references to
thinking in that institution are to its published _Annual Reports_, despite
the availability of Per Jacobbson's diary in the Library of the University
of Basle.) The restriction of their archival research to Geneva also means
that they ignore other possible relevant sources such as J.B. Condliffe's
papers and diary at Berkeley, Alexander Loveday's papers at Nuffield
College, Oxford and Gottfried Haberler's papers at the Hoover Institution.
The patchiness in the archival research in the case of the League shows up
most clearly in the discussions of its business cycle research program. It
has been known for some years that Dennis Robertson had substantial
correspondence with Alexander Loveday (the Director of the Economic,
Financial and Transit Section) as well as Gottfried Haberler, and Jan
Tinbergen (see Mizen, Moggridge and Presley 1997). Indeed, it was Robertson
who was first offered the job that eventuated in Haberler's _Prosperity and
Depression_ and it was Robertson who was hired by Loveday as a consultant
and adviser to Tinbergen, with the result that one of the League-sponsored
conferences devoted to Tinbergen's work was held in Trinity College,
Cambridge in July 1938. Yet in the relevant chapter Robertson does not make
anything other than a cameo appearance at a League meeting to discuss
Tinbergen in September 1937 until he reviewed in 1945 the Report of the
League's Delegation on Economic Depressions (for which, at Loveday's
request, he wrote a minimum program of action back in 1938).
As I have noted, the ILO archives seem to have been more thoroughly mined
than the League's with the result that the chapters on monetary policy,
public works and social economics are devoted to the views of its experts.
The exposition of ILO views and their evolution is clear and well done. If
there are any difficulties it is placing these views in context, especially
in relation to the evolving ideas on monetary policy and of one particular
economist, J.M. Keynes. Here the problem is that the authors misread _A
Treatise on Money_, with its special case for public works, despite their
quoting secondary literature that should have reminded them that they were
doing so rather than, as they think, the opposite (p. 76). As a result the
place of the ILO is understated. On the Keynes front, there is also a
problem as to the relation of later editions of _Prosperity and Depression_
to Keynes's views: the fact that Keynes favorably reviewed the second
edition seems to have eluded the authors. They also are in some difficulty
with the work of J.R. Bellerby at the ILO whose originality is understated
because the authors are unclear as to his formal training and possible
intellectual influences, where a reading of his _Who's Who_ entry might
have helped.
The study is more successful in the area of trade policy, where the authors
demonstrate that the League's economists did carve out a distinctive
position, and discussing Ragnar Nurkse's _International Currency
Experience_ (1944) and _Course and Control of Inflation_ (1946). However,
the discussion of _International Currency Experience_ is distinctive
compared to other chapters in the study in that it is less related to
contemporary developments of the 1940s than to the literature of the 1970s
to 1990s. Perhaps, as a result, it is misleading on the original Bretton
Woods attitudes to freedom of capital movements. The handling of the "full
employment movement" of the later 1940s is more successful in retaining its
links to contemporary discussions.
In the end the authors find that economists in international organizations
were generally cautious, guarded and tentative in their policy analysis.
They also suggest that in the 1920s in particular the macroeconomic and
monetary analyses of economists in international organizations were more a
reflection of contemporary orthodoxy than later, although there was some
return to the 1920s situation in 1940s. In between, perhaps because of
disagreements within the profession, in macroeconomic matters economists in
international organizations could be much more eclectic in staking out
distinctive positions. In trade and international monetary affairs, the
League's economists successfully staked out distinctive positions, perhaps
because in both cases the League was on the sidelines rather than at the
center of contemporary policy discussions. The overall record of
contributions is substantial. We are indebted to the authors for
highlighting it.
Reference:
Paul Mizen, Don Moggridge, and John Presley (1995), "The Papers of Dennis
Robertson: The Discovery of Unexpected Riches," _History of Political
Economy_ 29 (Winter 1997), 573-92.
D.E. Moggridge is Professor of Economics at the University of Toronto. In
the past he has edited the papers of John Maynard Keynes, James Meade and
Lionel Robbins. He is currently engaged in preparing an edition of Dennis
Robertson's professional correspondence for the Royal Economic Society and
in writing an intellectual biography of Harry Johnson.
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Published by EH.Net (December 2002). All EH.Net reviews are archived at
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