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I just put together a list of 2002 anniversaries to be posted on the links
site of the "The European Society for the History of Economic Thought"
(http://www.eshet-web.org/). Anyone who needs a reason to celebrate (or to
write a newspaper article) could use one - or several - of the following
excuses this year:
300 years ago Joseph Harris (1702-1764) was born, author of "An Essay upon
Money and Coins".
250 years ago David Hume (1711-1776) published his "Political Discourses"
(1752).
200 years ago, the Physiocrat Johann August Schrettwein (1731-1802), author
of "Grundveste der Staaten, oder die politische Oekonomie" (1778) died;
Henry Thornton (1760-1815) published "An Enquiry into the Nature and
Effects of the Paper Credit of Great Britain" (1802), and the
Proto-Marginalist Samuel Mountiford Longfield (1802-1884) was born.
150 years ago, Nassau William Senior (1790-1864) published "Four
Introductory Lectures on Political Economy" (1852); and William Forster
Lloyd (1795-1852) died.
100 years ago, a number of important economists were born: Theodore W.
Schultz (1902-1998), Fritz Machlup (1902-1983), Abraham Wald (1902-1950)
and Oskar Morgenstern (1902-1977). In the same year, 1902, Vilfredo Pareto
(1848-1923) published his "Systemes socialistes", Werner Sombart
(1863-1941) his "Der moderne Kapitalismus", and John Atkinson Hobson
(1858-1940) published "Imperialism: A Study" (1902).
50 years ago, William J. Baumol published "The Transaction Demand for Cash:
An Inventory Theoretic Approach" in the QJE (1952), and in the same year he
published his thesis "Welfare Economics and the Theory of the State". In
the same year, Gérard Debreu's "A Social Equilibrium Existence Theorem" got
published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Other
works that were published in 1952 are: James Edward Meade's (1907-1995) "A
Geometry of International Trade"; Jacob Viner's (1892-1970) "International
Trade and Economic Development"; Walter Eucken's (1891-1950) "Grundsaetze
der Wirtschaftspolitik"; Fritz Machlup's (1902-1983) "The Economics of
Seller's Competition"; John Kenneth Galbraith published "American
Capitalism: The concept of Countervailing Power".
25 years ago we lost Oskar Morgenstern (1902-1977), Harry Gordon Johnson
(1923-1977), and Jakob Marschak (1898-1977). The same year saw two
important non-mainstream publications: Edmond Malinvaud's "The Theory of
Unemployment Reconsidered" and Human P. Minsky's "The Financial Instability
Hypothesis: An Interpretation of Keynes and an Alternative to 'Standard
Theory'" (Nebraska Journal of Economics and Business, 1977), while Bertil
Ohlin (1899-1979) and James E. Meade (1907-1995) received the Nobel Price
in Economics for their contribution to the theory of international trade
and international capital movements.
A happy new year to you all,
Thomas
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