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Book Review
The Money Interest and the Public Interest: American Monetary Thought, 1920-1970. By Perry G. Mehrling. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1997. xvi, 283 pp. $45.00, isbn 0-674-58430-9.)
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Among economists, intellectual history is the province of the historians of economic thought, whose fervor in describing the purely technical frequently leads to a neglect of cultural and historical context. The novelty of this book resides in the author's attempt to place the life and work of three American monetary (?) economistsAllyn Young (1876-1929), Alvin Hansen (1887-1975), and Edward Shaw (1908-1994)within a much broader intellectual and historical framework. The Progressive movement of the last century spawned an institutional tradition among some American economists even if, according to the author, they may not have identified themselves as institutionalists. |
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The elements of Progressive thought that influenced all three economists included a deep commitment to improving the lot of man through social control and a rejection of unbridled laissez-faire, which implied a positive role for government as a safeguard for, rather than an encroachment on, economic freedom. As institutionalists, they were empiricists who immersed themselves in data, including the accumulation of historical evidence as a basis for formulating theory. They were attracted to applied economic problems and their solutions, though unlike their immediate predecessors they acknowledged the value of economic theory and did not shun its use. |
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