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Encyclopedia > Affluent society

John Kenneth Galbraith (born October 15, 1908) is something of an iconoclast among North American economists: he is an "old-fashioned" Canada. He graduated from the Ontario Agricultural College, now University of Guelph and then got an M.S. and Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley.


During World War II, Galbraith served a tenure as deputy head of the Office of Price Administration. At the end of the war, he was asked to carry out a survey of US and allied strategic bombing, and concluded that it served no use and did not shorten the war (Source: The Guardian newspaper, Aug. 14, 2004). After the war, he became an advisor to post-war administrations in Germany and Japan.


In 1949, Galbraith was appointed professor of economics at Harvard University. He also served as editor of Fortune.


He was a friend of President John F. Kennedy and was appointed by Kennedy as U.S. ambassador to India from 1961 to 1963. There he attempted to aid the Indian government with developing its economy. While in India, he helped establish one of the first computer sciences department at the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh.


In 1997 he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada.

Contents

Works

In American Capitalism: The concept of countervailing power, a seminal work published in 1952, Galbraith outlines how the American economy in the future would be managed by a triumvirate of big business, big labour, and an activist government. He contrasted this with the previous pre_depression era where big business had free rein over the economy.


In another work, The Affluent Society, which became a bestseller, Galbraith outlines how to be successful the United States would need to make large public investments in items such as highways and education. In The New Industrial State (1967), he argues that very few industries in the United States fit the model of perfect competition. The third work in this triumvarate was Economics and the Public Purpose (1973), in which he expanded on these themes by discussing, among other issues, the subservient role of women in the unrewarded management of ever-greater consumption, and the role of the 'technostructure' in the large firm in influencing perceptions of sound economic policy aims . In A Short History of Financial Euphoria (1990), he traces financial bubbles through several centuries, and cautions that what currently seems to be "the next great thing" may not be that great and may have quite irrational factors promoting it.


Galbraith's son, James K. Galbraith, is also a prominent economist.


Quotes

  • "Faced with the choice between changing one's mind and proving that there is no need to do so, almost everybody gets busy on the proof."
  • "If you feed enough oats to the horse, some will pass through to feed the sparrows." - in relation to trickle-down economics
  • "Under capitalism, man exploits man. Under communism, it's just the opposite."
  • "The only function of economic forecasting is to make astrology look respectable."

Partial bibliography

  • Modern Competition and Business Policy, 1938.
  • A Theory of Price Control, 1952.
  • American Capitalism: The concept of countervailing power, 1952.
  • The Great Crash, 1929, 1954.
  • The Affluent Society, 1958.
  • The Liberal Hour, 1960
  • The New Industrial State, 1967.
  • The Triumph (a novel), 1968.
  • Ambassador's Journal, 1969.
  • Economics, Peace and Laughter, 1972.
  • Power and the Useful Economist, 1973, AER
  • Economics and the Public Purpose, 1973
  • Money, 1975.
  • The Age of Uncertainty (also a BBC 13 part television series), 1977.
  • Annals of an Abiding Liberal, 1979.
  • A Life in Our Times, 1981.
  • A Tenured Professor, 1990.
  • A Journey Through Economic Time, 1994.
  • The Good Society: the humane agenda, 1996.
  • The Economics of Innocent Fraud, 2004.
  • The Nature of Mass Poverty
  • Money: Whence It Came, Where It Went

See also

External links

  • Wikiquote - Quotes by John Kenneth Galbraith
  • econlib.org (http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/bios/Galbraith.html) biography
  • John Kenneth Galbraith Biography (http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/G/Galbrait.html)







  Results from FactBites:
 
AllRefer.com - affluent society (Economics: Terms And Concepts) - Encyclopedia (264 words)
affluent society, term coined by John Kenneth Galbraith in The Affluent Society (1958) to describe the United States after World War II.
An affluent society, as the term was used ironically by Galbraith, is rich in private resources but poor in public ones because of a misplaced priority on increasing production in the private sector.
Galbraith argued that industrial production was being devoted to satisfying trivial consumer needs, in part to maintain employment, and that the United States should shift resources to improve schools, the infrastructure, recreational resources, and social services, providing a better quality of life instead of an ever greater quantity of consumer goods.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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