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Founder of Modern Economics: Paul A. Samuelson: Volume 1: Becoming Samuelson, 1915-1948

Author

Listed:
  • Backhouse, Roger E.

    (University of Birmingham)

Abstract

Paul Samuelson was at the heart of a revolution in economics. He was "the foremost academic economist of the 20th century," according to New York Times, and the first American to win the Nobel Prize in Economics. His work transformed the field of economics and helped give it the theoretical and mathematic rigor that increased its influence in business and policy making. In Founder of Modern Economics, Roger E. Backhouse explores the central importance of Samuelson's personality and social networks to understanding his intellectual development. This is the first of two volumes covering Samuelson's extended and productive life and career. This volume surveys Samuelson's early years growing up in the Midwest to his experiences at the University of Chicago and Harvard University, where leading scholars in economics and other disciplines stimulated and rewarded his curiosity. His thinking was influenced by the natural sciences and he understood that a critical, scientific approach increased insights into important social and economic questions. He realized that these questions could not be answered through rhetorical debate but required rigor. His "eureka" moment came, he said, when "a good fairy whispered to me that math was a skeleton key to solve age old problems in economics." Backhouse traces Samuelson's thinking from his early days to the publication of his groundbreaking book Foundations of Economic Analysis and Economics: An Introductory Analysis, which influenced generations of students. His work set the stage for economics to become a more cohesive and coherent discipline, based on mathematical techniques that provided surprising insights into many important topics, from business cycles to wage and unemployment rates, and from how competition influences trade to how tax rates affects tax collection. Founder of Modern Economics is a profound contribution to understanding how modern economics developed and the thinking of a revolutionary thinker.

Suggested Citation

  • Backhouse, Roger E., 2017. "Founder of Modern Economics: Paul A. Samuelson: Volume 1: Becoming Samuelson, 1915-1948," OUP Catalogue, Oxford University Press, number 9780190664091.
  • Handle: RePEc:oxp:obooks:9780190664091
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    Cited by:

    1. Michaël Assous & Olivier Bruno & Vincent Carret & Muriel Dal-Pont Legrand, 2021. "Expectations and full employment. Hansen, Samuelson and Lange," Revue d'économie politique, Dalloz, vol. 131(3), pages 511-530.
    2. Assous, Michaël & Boianovsky, Mauro & Dávila-Fernández, Marwil J., 2024. "Samuelson's last macroeconomic model: Secular stagnation and endogenous cyclical growth," Structural Change and Economic Dynamics, Elsevier, vol. 69(C), pages 417-426.
    3. Giraud, Yann, 2018. "Textbooks in the Historiography of Recent Economics," SocArXiv j9tkf, Center for Open Science.
    4. Galambos, Adam, 2019. "Descriptive complexity and revealed preference theory," Mathematical Social Sciences, Elsevier, vol. 101(C), pages 54-64.
    5. Cherrier, Beatrice & Svorenčík, Andrej, 2017. "Defining Excellence: 70 Years of John Bates Clark Medals," SocArXiv bacmj, Center for Open Science.
    6. Dilian Vassilev, 2020. "Secular stagnation – the origin of the concept, a review of the scientific literature and the nature of the academic debate," Economic Thought journal, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences - Economic Research Institute, issue 2, pages 137-158.

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