fbpx
Wikipedia

Costin Murgescu

Costin Ion Murgescu (Romanian pronunciation: [kosˈtin iˈon murˈdʒesku], birth name Constantin Ion Murgescu;[1] October 27, 1919 – August 30, 1989) was a Romanian economist, jurist, journalist and diplomat. A supporter of fascism during his youth, he switched to communism by the end of World War II, and became an editor of the Communist Party daily organ, România Liberă. He taught at the University of Bucharest and worked for the Institute of Economic Conjecture. Having campaigned for multilateralism in world affairs as early as 1944, he helped to distance Romania from the Soviet Union after 1964, and later represented his country at the United Nations. He wrote extensively, publishing works on the effects of land reform and industrialization, on the history of economic thought, and on Romania's relations with the Comecon and the First World.

Costin Murgescu
Murgescu in September 1969
Born
Constantin Ion Murgescu

(1919-10-27)October 27, 1919
DiedAugust 30, 1989(1989-08-30) (aged 69)
Other namesV. Borcea
Academic background
Alma materBolyai University
Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies
InfluencesPetru Comarnescu, Dimitrie Gusti, Mihail Manoilescu, Victor Slăvescu, Gheorghe Zane
Academic work
Era20th century
School or tradition
InstitutionsUniversity of Bucharest
Institute of Economic Conjecture
Romanian Academy
Institute of South-East European Studies
Main interestsEconomic history, political economy, economic forecasting, management science, economic sociology, political philosophy, Romanian literature
InfluencedVictor Babiuc, Eugen Dijmărescu, Mugur Isărescu, Bogdan Murgescu, Napoleon Pop

An innovator among the Romanian communist intellectual and professional elite, Murgescu spent his final decades questioning the assumptions of Marxian economics. At the Institute for World Economy, which later became a branch of the Romanian Academy, he trained a new generation of like-minded economists. Shortly before his death, he was involved in dissidence against the Nicolae Ceaușescu regime. Although he did not live long enough to witness the 1989 Revolution, he played an indirect part in shaping the economic policies to which the country turned in post-communism. The estranged son of Lieutenant Colonel Murgescu, a convicted war criminal, Costin Murgescu was married to Ecaterina Oproiu, a Romanian writer and social commentator. He was survived by his nephew and disciple, historian Bogdan Murgescu.

Biography edit

Early life and fascist militancy edit

Born in Râmnicu Sărat,[2][3] the future economist was the son of a Romanian Land Forces officer, Ion C. Murgescu.[4] Young Murgescu was originally interested in jurisprudence, and entered the law faculty of the University of Bucharest. His beginnings were as a literary critic, with an essay on the literary and artistic life of Balcic. It was picked up by the magazine Familia, and deemed "interesting, but insufficient" by chroniclers at Revista Fundațiilor Regale.[5] Aged nineteen, Murgescu wrote a historical work, about the trial of the Transylvanian Memorandum signatories.[3][6] Around that time, he was also a staff writer for the Oradea literary newspaper, Noua Gazetă de Vest, where he conducted a questionnaire survey on the state of cultural life in the provinces of Greater Romania.[7]

During the first years of World War II, Murgescu was a supporter of the fascist Iron Guard and, in his own definition, a theoretician of "totalitarian" politics. He began a collaboration with the newspaper Universul, where, as later recounted by his colleague Ștefan Baciu, he was one of the three staff writers who showed up for work wearing the Guard's green-colored shirts.[8] He was also allegedly involved in brawls at the university. These pitted him against students such as Dan Amedeo Lăzărescu, who had defaced portraits of the Guard's founding father, Corneliu Zelea Codreanu.[9] Starting in August 1940, a full month before the Guard proclaimed its National Legionary regime, Murgescu published a series of political musings in Universul, as well as in periodicals such as Buna Vestire.[1] These were soon after collected as a brochure, Note pentru Statul Totalitar ("Notes on the Totalitarian State").[10][11][12]

The general conclusion of the work, partly based on direct quotations from Mein Kampf, was that totalitarianism, moving beyond authoritarian regimes and their "everyday ephemera", was centered on the promise of a "new man"—whose creation would both rehabilitate humanity and change history "for eternity".[10] As a literary chronicler at Universul, Constantin Fântâneru saw in Murgescu "that model of an author who will win people over to a doctrine simply by outlining clearly its ideas."[11] In the official newspaper Țara, Nicolae Ciuceanu noted: "With this work, Mr Costin Murgescu has won himself a leading position in Romanian journalism, and this accomplishment is all the more important, given that the writer is presently just 24 years of age."[10] The brochure quoted at length from the speeches of Benito Mussolini[11] and Iron Guard leader Horia Sima.[13] Envisaging the "new man" as "strong, lively, and immaculate",[13] it called for a non-violent "moral revolution" to bring Romania into the "New European Order".[11] It sought to rebuild culture around the Guard's "Legionary spirit", and promised artistic freedom "only to ethnic Romanians."[13] In his Universul chronicles, Murgescu offered his praise to both Codreanu and the military Conducător, Ion Antonescu.[14] Moreover, he penned warnings against the Guard's enemies: "those who have martyred this People—no mercy for them. They should expect a terrible punishment."[15] He still had contributions as a literary critic, such as a short introduction to Japanese poetry.[16]

Murgescu remained active in the press after the Guard fell from power in the violent purge of early 1941. With Antonescu as the uncontested dictator, Romania became involved in the anti-Soviet war as an ally of Nazi Germany. Murgescu was drafted into the Romanian Land Forces, but continued to write (including an unpublished novel and war diary) and was allowed to pass his examinations at the university.[6] With his journalistic work, he moved to the more mainstream review, Vremea, where he contributed analytical essays about the war effort. In one such piece, on October 25, 1942, just before the crushing of Romanian forces, he predicted that the Red Army was too exhausted and famished to mount an offensive.[17] By 1943, his articles in Vremea and Revista Fundațiilor Regale were turning toward economics and economic history, citing Victor Slăvescu as a model and inspiration.[18] Murgescu's father, Ion, had "strong pro-Nazi sympathies"[19] and was a willing participant in Antonescu's war crimes. By September 1942, the elder Murgescu was the commandant of Vapniarka, a concentration camp for Jewish deportees, ordering them to be fed on grass pea, which caused an outbreak of lathyrism and resulted in several deaths and many more crippling infirmities.[20][21]

Communist turn and România Liberă edit

In a 1987 article, L. Eșanu argues that Murgescu's participation in the left-wing resistance to Antonescu was already visible in January 1943, the alleged date at which the underground newspaper România Liberă had been set up. Eșanu includes Murgescu on a list of its founders.[22] As noted by historian Lucian Boia, he had fully renounced his "juvenile totalitarian illusions"[23] by January 1944, with Romania facing the possibility of a Soviet invasion. Finding himself in open conflict with his own father,[19] Murgescu became a contributor to Ecoul, the semi-legal newspaper. It published his essays against Antonescu's economic policies and the New Order, which argued, with a noted "dialectical" tinge, in favor of multilateralism and an "international division of labor".[24] His Vremea articles, arranged for print by the antifascist editor George Ivașcu, looked forward to a new era of peace, shaped by international cooperation. According to Boia, he may have been encouraged to explore the subject by the Propaganda Ministry, which was sending out signals that some dignitaries were willing to sue for peace.[25]

During or immediately after the August 23 Coup which toppled Antonescu, Murgescu involved himself with left-wing political circles, including the Romanian Communist Party (PCR) and the Union of Patriots. The latter's newspaper, Tribuna Poporului, had him as an economic columnist from its first issue, on October 16.[26] As a display of his loyalty to the new regime, he volunteered for war against the Nazis, fought in Northern Transylvania, and was badly wounded.[27] He was a personal witness to the recapture of Târgu Mureș in October 1944, writing a România Liberă reportage on this subject.[28] His piece on the taking on Cluj appeared in 1945, as part of a reportage collection curated by architect George Matei Cantacuzino.[29]

From 1944 to 1952,[6] that is to say during the early stages of the Romanian communist regime, Murgescu was editor of România Liberă, which had been taken over by the PCR. In this capacity, Murgescu, who generally used the pen name "V. Borcea",[1] helped organize a bureau of national and international correspondents, as well as its agitprop section.[27][30] He contributed various articles on national affairs and international relations, praising the 1945 visit to Moscow of the PCR Minister of Transport Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej as "a momentous start" in Soviet–Romanian relations.[31] His own far-right engagement in the 1930s was the object of scrutiny by Dreptatea daily put out by the opposition National Peasants' Party. In April 1946 its correspondent, George Păun, listed Murgescu, George Macovescu and Dumitru Corbea as communist propagandists who had previously served the fascist cause.[32] In late 1945, Murgescu was employed by the communized Propaganda Ministry and the Siguranța detectives, the latter of whom vetted him as a regime loyalist, noting his friendship with PCR activists such as Simion Oeriu and Grigore Preoteasa.[1]

Invited by the Fatherland Front in neighboring Bulgaria, Murgescu witnessed first-hand the Bulgarian legislative elections on October 27, 1946; he was part of a journalists' delegation that also comprised Aurel Baranga, Paul Georgescu, Ștefan Tita, and Gheorghe Zaharia.[33] Ahead of Romania's own elections in November, Murgescu played down Peasantist concerns about vote-rigging and intimidation, and declared such claims to be part of a ploy against the leftist parties in government. His statements were polemically reviewed by Dreptatea, which introduced him as bine [sic] cunoscutul legionar ("that notorious Guardist").[34] He was also a prominent contributor to the communist literary magazine, Contemporanul, where he praised the party for its "consolidation of democracy".[35] His first theoretical work appeared in 1947, outlining his belief that the new economic regime would be based on the development of heavy industry.[36] In August 1948, Veac Nou magazine, put out by the Romanian Society for Friendship with the Soviet Union, featured his article on Soviet–Romanian economic cooperation, rendering his belief that Soviet backing was crucial for both Romania's industrial development and her consolidation as a "people's democracy".[37]

Around 1950, Murgescu married Ecaterina Oproiu, a fellow România Liberă journalist who went on to establish the official film magazine, Cinema.[27][30] She later achieved fame in her own right, as Romania's first-ever television critic[38] and a promoter of socialist feminism.[39] Following the country's change of orientation, Murgescu's father had found himself arrested, and appeared before the Romanian People's Tribunals in April 1945.[20] He was initially sentenced to death, and some authors believe that he was executed.[40] However, his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment with hard labor on June 1, 1945.[41] Passing through the notorious Aiud prison,[42] he may have still been alive during the mid-1950s.[19]

ICE research edit

Expelled from România Liberă following an inquiry into his social origins,[6] and having to explain his attitude toward his father the war criminal,[43] Murgescu focused entirely on his work in economics. From 1953 to 1956, he was a scientific researcher in the political economy department of the University of Bucharest.[2][6][43] He later joined the team of economists and statisticians at the Institute of Economic Conjecture (ICE), located in Bucharest. This institution was headed by Gogu Rădulescu, a disgraced and sidelined PCR activist. Rădulescu appointed Murgescu head of the National Economy Section, and deputy ICE Director.[44] At the time, the ICE also offered employment to the formerly repressed scholar Gheorghe Zane, who was protected by the PCR eminence Alexandru Bârlădeanu[45] and who, as Murgescu put it, was thus allowed to continue his interwar research, with input from "dialectical materialism".[46]

Murgescu himself was assigned to work on an economic overview of the 1945 land reform, which he published in 1956 at Editura Academiei. Writing at the time, Marxist philosopher Ernő Gáll suggested that Murgescu's tract offered "rich and convincing material" about the pauperization of Romania's peasant class before and during World War II.[47] As noted in 2009 by scholars Dorin Dobrincu and Constantin Iordachi, the study, written "during the Stalinist years", has "limited analytical value", but still stands out as the only land reform monograph in "domestic historical writing" under communism.[48] As noted by historian Cristian Vasile, Murgescu's work was politicized, and presented praise of Gheorghiu-Dej, now the regime leader, voiced in terms similar to his earlier panegyrics for Codreanu.[43] In his private conversations with a colleague, G. Iosub, he "complain[ed] that the executive power never took his forecasts into account, that no minister would even glance over them."[49] By the end of the 1950s, with a slight relaxation of communist censorship, he tried to promote a reevaluation of interwar Romanian sociology, and organized at the ICE work-groups that were basing themselves on Dimitrie Gusti's sociological research teams.[50][51]

These rural expeditions, recounted by Murgescu's articles in Contemporanul (August 1957), allowed for a discussion of collectivization, which they presented as a relevant success (particularly so in the model regions of Constanța and Hunedoara).[52] Also in Contemporanul, Murgescu published an essay that sought to rehabilitate Gusti, but his effort was smothered by the Communist Party in 1959.[50] At the ICE in 1958, he came into conflict with his superior Miron Constantinescu, and was afterward demoted to department head.[53] According to fellow economist Egon Balas, Murgescu was also able to use political censorship for his own gains, "manufacturing a conflict" with Constantinescu, who was a somewhat dissenting communist, and obtaining his ousting. As a result of this intrigue, Murgescu became sole editor of the ICE academic journal, Revista Economică, in 1958.[54] He also resumed his position as second director, but was placed under tight surveillance by Securitate agents in 1959; according to Vasile, he was most likely recruited as a Securitate informant (code name "Barbu Rîmniceanu"), and tasked with reporting on the activities of former fascists such as Bucur Țincu and Ion Veverca.[43] His position at the Institute mirrored that of Ion Rachmuth—an unusual situation in which a former Guardist and a Jewish man, once exposed to racial persecution, had to report to each other on a daily basis.[55]

Making occasional returns to the field of Marxist economic history, Murgescu wrote propaganda works, accusing the deposed Romanian royal family, and in particular Carol II, of having organized a "plunder" of Romanian assets.[56] In 1960, the anticommunist Romanian diaspora stood accused by the communists of covering up for fascism. In reply, the Paris-based magazine La Nation Roumaine published ample revelations about the fascist past of Murgescu, Mihai Ralea, Mihu Dragomir, and various other figures of the new regime.[57] Also in 1960, Murgescu and N. N. Constantinescu were editors of a major economic history tract, Contribuții la istoria capitalului străin în Romînia ("Contributions to the History of Foreign Capital in Romania"). This work, also put out by Editura Academiei, was revisited some 20 years later by historian Vasile Bogza, who noted that, despite some flawed interpretations, it remained one of the "thorough studies" in the field.[58] A University of Bucharest professor,[59] Murgescu was received as a corresponding member of the Romanian Academy in 1963, earning a doctorate in economics from the Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies in 1964.[2][60] He also served the Institute of South-East European Studies as an academic supervisor for its Revue des Études Sud-est Européenes.[61]

National communism edit

By 1963, Murgescu was called upon by the regime to inform the world about Romania's economic ideology, which was increasingly de-satellized, and altogether different from Soviet policies. That year, he denounced the Comecon's "pseudo-theories" on industrialization, which seemed to offer Romania a subservient economic position within the common market.[62] In 1964, the PCR leadership called upon Murgescu to publish an even more virulent official reply against the Soviets and the Comecon. By advancing a "Valev Plan", the Soviets had suggested that Romania become an agricultural hinterland for the more industrialized socialist countries. Murgescu's selection by the regime was an implicit recognition of his scholarly authority;[63] his critique of the Valev proposal also announced a new political stage, of national communism.[27][30][64][65] His articles called for a reform of the Comecon, and, defying the Sino-Soviet split, suggested the accession of China.[66]

With the inauguration of Nicolae Ceaușescu as Party Secretary, and later President of Romania, Murgescu had more opportunities to expand on his economic theories. Serving only as ICE department head from 1965,[67] he continued to edit Revista Economică to 1968, then Revista Română de Relații Internaționale (from 1968 to 1970).[2][50] In parallel, he was taken on as an adviser by Ion Gheorghe Maurer, who was serving as President of the Council of Ministers.[63] In 1967, he declared his new interest in exploring "national specificity", commending the old-regime intellectuals Zane and Petru Comarnescu for their work in that field.[68] He also partook in the effort to reassess Mihail Manoilescu as the interwar doctrinaire of economic nationalism, and is regarded by economist Dan Popescu as Manoilescu's intellectual heir.[69] From June 1969, he had a Tuesday evening show on Radio Romania, as part of the series Tableta de Seară, which also featured, among others, actor Radu Beligan, mathematician Grigore Moisil, writer Marin Sorescu, and literary scholar Edgar Papu.[70]

Murgescu moved from ICE to the Institute for World Economy (IEM), where he worked from 1970 until his death,[2][60] and was for a while its director.[59] In 1976, he was elected Vice President of the International Marketing Federation.[2][3] The Romanian position regarding the Comecon was given expression in a 1969 tract România socialistă și cooperarea internațională ("Socialist Romania and International Cooperation"), which came out at Editura Politică with Murgescu, Mircea Malița and Gheorghe Surpat as the three authors.[71] In 1971, the same venue put out Murgescu's tract on team management within the socialist economy, which he theorized as a function of democratic centralism.[72] In 1974, he published, at Editura Meridiane, the French-language introduction L'economie socialiste en Roumanie ("Romania's Socialist Economy"). It explained the regime's policy of cooperating with the West in industrial development and scientific research, noting that socialist economies had to catch up with capitalism before the latter could experience a final crisis.[73] According to Canadian economist Jeanne Kirk Laux, Murgescu was trying to reconcile Romania's relations with multinational corporations with Ceaușescu's "national sovereignty obsession".[74] Indirectly, the book documents the regime's efforts to compensate for the high price of Western technology by proposing various methods of counter trade (methods which, Kirk Laux notes, Murgescu claimed as original Romanian contributions to the theory of international trade).[75]

Murgescu was particularly interested in Romanian economic history in relation to the global economy, and a pioneer of interdisciplinarity.[76] In 1967, he returned to sociology by contributing to a collective study on "the effects of industrialization on social mobility".[77] He was again focused on exposing the old monarchic system as a vehicle for economic fraud—his 1970 tract about the royal family's role in market manipulation was welcomed by Alexandru Puiu in the communist paper Scînteia Tineretului. As argued by Puiu, the book was one of "irreproachable scientific standing", though also a minute exposé of a robbery "in all its ugliness."[78] In 1972, Murgescu put out a "biography of ideas" for David Ricardo, analyzed within the larger context of the Industrial Revolution.[79]

During early 1977, the School of International and Public Affairs in New York City played host to a delegation of Romanian historians, including Murgescu, Virgil Cândea, Constantin C. Giurescu, Ștefan Pascu, and the President's brother, Ilie Ceaușescu. Their lectures were picketed by protestors who argued that national communism was a form of Stalinism, and that it directly threatened the community life of Hungarians in Romania.[80] With Damian Hurezeanu, Murgescu was a guest of the 15th International Congress of Historical Sciences (Bucharest, 1980), where they presented a new synthesis of land reform policies in interwar Romania.[81] A Romanian Ambassador to the United Nations in the early 1980s,[30] Murgescu also served for a while as ECOSOC President.[2][3] He published his notes on the New International Economic Order in Partners in East-West Economic Relations, a collection of studies edited by Zoltán Fallenbüchl and C. H. McMillan for Pergamon Press. They outlined Romania's support for the New International Economic Order and her critique of the Soviet Union. As Murgescu argued, the Soviet economy was to be taxed the same as a capitalist developed country when contributing to the United Nations Development Programme.[82]

Dissidence, death, and legacy edit

Murgescu followed up with several studies of his own. In 1980, he put together Zane's complete works, with his own preface. His effort was praised by Cândea, who recommended that Murgescu expand his contribution into a Zane monograph.[46] The series also includes his signature work, Mersul ideilor economice la români ("The Development of Economic Ideas among the Romanians"), appearing as two volumes—in 1987 and 1990, respectively.[3][83] The initial volume was welcomed by literary critic Mihai Ungheanu as a contribution to the "necessary recovery of Romanian values in social and economic thinking"—alongside contributions by Ilie Bădescu and Ion Ungureanu.[84] The work was instead met with criticism by the literary sociologist Zigu Ornea, sparking a debate which was to be Murgescu's last.[85]

Murgescu spent the last stage of his life as a dissident, in latent conflict with President Ceaușescu. At the IEM, he helped organize debates about politics and economics, introduced Romanian students to the core notions of supply-side economics, and made hints about the need for profound change.[86] Murgescu's 1982 work on the Japanese economic miracle was done from personal observations from his extended trip there; overall, he concluded that Japanese companies had fully focused on technological innovation, and had planned ahead with a focus on such changes.[87] It was a Romanian best-seller.[76] Allegedly, Murgescu had come to believe that the Valev Plan was a consistent form of economic integration, and that national communism was essentially flawed.[64] Foreign Minister Ștefan Andrei shielded Murgescu from Ceaușescu's anger, and allowed him to maintain a link with the West through contacts with Reuters.[88] Another inner-PCR dissident and former diplomat, Silviu Brucan, indicated Murgescu as one of his main sources for critical reports which were sent to foreign ambassadors in Romania.[89]

Murgescu died a few months before the anti-communist Revolution of December 1989.[3][90][91] He was buried at Bellu Cemetery on September 2.[92] Obituary pieces included one by Ornea. He quoted Murgescu's letter to him, in which the economist had applauded any constructive debate between "men of culture".[85] Murgescu had left several unpublished texts, including parts of a sequel to Mersul ideilor,[85] but also Drumul oilor ("The Sheep's Road"), which detailed the economic history of sheep farming in Romania. The latter text was carried in a December 1990 issue of Academica journal, with an introduction by Mircea Măciu (in turn criticized in Contemporanul for stretching Murgescu's conclusions, and for using the "wooden language" of official Marxism).[93]

Murgescu was survived by his wife, Ecaterina Oproiu, who went on to serve as a Presidential appointee on a visual media regulatory agency, the National Audiovisual Council, between 1992 and 2000.[94] Murgescu's nephew, Bogdan Murgescu, also trained in economic history, and achieved notoriety for his analysis of economic backwardness.[95][96] He credits Costin Murgescu as an early influence on his own work.[91] Mersul ideilor, reissued by the National Bank of Romania presses in 1994,[76] was complemented by the posthumous Drumurile unității românești ("The Paths of Romanian Unity", 1996).[3] As a learning institution, the IEM was the alma mater of economists who rose to political prominence after 1989, among them Eugen Dijmărescu, Mugur Isărescu, Napoleon Pop, and Victor Babiuc.[97][95] In 1990, it was renamed the "Costin Murgescu Institute of World Economy", becoming part of the Romanian Academy network.[98] According to Isărescu: "At the Institute for World Economy, professor Costin Murgescu was able to fulfill his calling on many levels. Constantly preoccupied with establishing a Romanian school of economic research, he turned [the IEM] into a veritable creative workshop."[60] As noted in 2010 by sociologist Zoltán Rostás, Murgescu's "sinuous youth" was "hardly mentioned", "but [he] was nearly sanctified by the elite of economists who are now in their sixties."[50]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Vasile (2018), p. 586
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Laurențiu Guțescu, Ion Bold, Marius Băcescu, Oameni de seamă: economiști. Editura Mica Valahie, 2013, ISBN 978-606830-457-1, pp. 365–366
  3. ^ a b c d e f g (in Romanian) at the Bank Deposit Guarantee Fund site
  4. ^ Balas, p. 336; Vasile (2018), p. 587
  5. ^ "Revista revistelor", in Revista Fundațiilor Regale, Issue 12/1938, p. 714
  6. ^ a b c d e Isărescu, p. 32
  7. ^ Anca Filipovici, "O incursiune în presa culturală interbelică din provincie: localismul creator ca simptom al periferiei în nordul Moldovei", in Raduț Bîlbîie, Mihaela Teodor (eds.), Elita culturală și presa (Congresul Național de istorie a presei, ediția a VI-a), Editura Militară, Bucharest, 2013, ISBN 978-973-32-0922-5, pp. 267–268
  8. ^ "Centenar Radu Gyr", in Biblioteca Bucureștilor, Issue 3/2005, p. 13
  9. ^ "Până la ora 12. Note și comentarii. Evoluție", in Dreptatea, June 12, 1946, p. 4
  10. ^ a b c Nicolae Ciuceanu, "Țara culturală. Note pentru Statul Totalitar", in Țara, December 16, 1941, p. 2
  11. ^ a b c d Constantin Fântâneru, "Cronica literară. Costin I. Murgescu, Note pentru Statul Totalitar", in Universul Literar, Issue 45/1940, p. 2
  12. ^ Boia, pp. 164–165
  13. ^ a b c "Note", in Preocupări Literare. Revista Societății Prietenii Istoriei Literare, Issue 11/1940, pp. 697–698
  14. ^ Boia, pp. 164–165, 234, 291
  15. ^ Boia, p. 165
  16. ^ Costin I. Murgescu, "O prezentare lirică a Japoniei", in Revista Fundațiilor Regale, Issue 12/1940, pp. 690–696
  17. ^ Boia, p. 231
  18. ^ Costin I. Murgescu, "Victor Slăvescu și posibilitatea unei istorii a gândirii noastre economice", in Revista Fundațiilor Regale, Issue 11/1943, pp. 463–467
  19. ^ a b c Balas, p. 336
  20. ^ a b "Maiorul Murgescu confruntat cu victimele din lagărul Vapniarca. 'Ați intrat sănătoși și veți ieși in cârje de aci' le spune maiorul Murgescu victimelor", in Timpul, April 5, 1945, p. 1
  21. ^ "Dr. Arthur Kessler (1903–2000)", in Lathyrus Lathyrism Newsletter, Vol. 3, pp. 3–4; Dennis Deletant, Hitler's Forgotten Ally: Ion Antonescu and His Regime, Romania, 1940-1944. Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2006, ISBN 1-4039-9341-6, p. 197; Kornis, pp. 228–229
  22. ^ L. Eșanu, "Sublinieri. 15 August - Ziua presei române. Tradiții revoluționare", in Ateneu, Issue 8/1987, p. 2
  23. ^ Boia, p. 234
  24. ^ Angela Banciu, "Din propaganda rezistenței antifasciste românești. Ziarul Ecoul și rolul său între anii 1943—1944", in Revista de Istorie, Issue 7/1989, pp. 697–698
  25. ^ Boia, pp. 234–235
  26. ^ Valentin Silvestru, "1944–1983", in Teatrul, Issue 3/1983, p. 84
  27. ^ a b c d (in Romanian) Virgil Lazăr, "RL, 135 de ani. Prima femeie la cârma României Libere", in România Liberă, March 6, 2012
  28. ^ Vasile Budrigă, "Luptele purtate pentru eliberarea României de sub dominația fascistă reflectate în presa centrală românească a timpului (23 august – 25 octombrie 1944)", in Revista Muzeelor și Monumentelor, Issue 5/1985, pp. 54, 56
  29. ^ M. N. R., "G. M. Cantacuzino și Galeria Eroilor", in Săptămîna, Issue 36/1988, p. 3
  30. ^ a b c d (in Romanian) Virgil Lazăr, "Planul Valev, făcut praf de România Liberă", in România Liberă, February 3, 2011
  31. ^ (in Romanian) Cristina Diac, , in Jurnalul Național, January 10, 2006
  32. ^ George Păun, "Scânteia apreciază", in Dreptatea, April 7, 1946, p. 3
  33. ^ "Ultimele știri. Buletin intern", in Moldova Liberă, October 24, 1946, p. 4
  34. ^ "Până la ora 12. Note și comentarii. Tactică", in Dreptatea, October 24, 1946, p. 4
  35. ^ Boia, p. 291
  36. ^ Vasile (2018), pp. 586–587
  37. ^ "A apărut Veac Nou. No. 15 — August 1948", in Frontul Plugarilor, August 1, 1948, p. 3
  38. ^ Alexandru Matei, "Screening the Thaw Era: Romanian Television in the 60s as a Public Service Television", in The French Journal for Media Research, Issue 2/2014
  39. ^ Luciana Jinga, "Citoyenneté et Travail des Femmes dans la Roumanie Communiste", in History of Communism in Europe, Vol. 3, 2012, pp. 98, 107; Petruța Teampău, "«Femeia — Constructorul unei vieți noi și mamă de constructori». Corp, gen și ideologie în propaganda comunistă a anilor '70", in Hajnalka Harbula, Enikő Magyari-Vincze (eds.), ANTHROPO – Lenyomatok. Amprente. Imprints (Cultural Analysis Series 13), EFES & Fundația Desire, Cluj, 2008, ISBN 978-606-526-004-7, pp. 97–98, 100
  40. ^ Kornis, p. 230
  41. ^ "Partea I-a: Decrete. Ministerul Justiției", in Monitorul Oficial, June 2, 1945, pp. 4597–4598
  42. ^ Emil Niculescu, "«Unde sunt cei care nu mai sunt». File din drama armatei regale române", in Străjer în Calea Furtunilor, Issue 12/2012, p. 53
  43. ^ a b c d Vasile (2018), p. 587
  44. ^ Balas, p. 335
  45. ^ Vasile (2018), p. 584
  46. ^ a b Virgil Cândea, "G. Zane, de la economie la istorie", in Flacăra, Issue 36/1980, p. 20
  47. ^ Ernő Gáll, "Caracterul neștiințific și antiprogresist al sociologiei țărăniste", in Buletinul Universităților V. Babeș și Bolyai, Cluj, Vols. 1–2, 1956, pp. 20–21
  48. ^ Dorin Dobrincu, Constantin Iordachi, "Introduction", in Transforming Peasants, Property and Power: The Collectivization of Agriculture in Romania, 1949–1962, Central European University Press, Budapest & New York City, 2009, ISBN 978-963-9776-25-8, p. 6
  49. ^ G. Iosub, "Da, da, țărani evrei în România. De vorbă cu dr. Avram Rosen, doctor în economie", in Minimum, Vol. XIV, Issue 157, April 2000, p. 19
  50. ^ a b c d (in Romanian) Iulia Popovici, Zoltán Rostás, "Gusti nu era anticomunist, nici antilegionar. Era prevăzător" (I), in Observator Cultural, Issue 520, April 2010
  51. ^ Ștefan Bosomitu, "Notes and Remarks on the (Re)Institutionalization of Sociology in Communist Romania in the 60s", in History of Communism in Europe, Vol. 2, 2011, pp. 181–183
  52. ^ Mara Mărginean, "From Printed Word to Bureaucratic Negotiation. Housing Projects for Workers during the 1950s in Romania", in sITA (studies in History & Theory of Architecture), Vol. 1, 2013, p. 129
  53. ^ Vasile (2018), pp. 587, 590
  54. ^ Balas, pp. 357–358
  55. ^ Vasile (2018), pp. 587–588
  56. ^ (in Romanian) Andreea Lupșor, , in Historia, August 2013
  57. ^ Nicolae Florescu, "Reevaluări. Vintilă Horia și utopia narativă (II)", in Acolada, Issue 6/2013, p. 19
  58. ^ Vasile Bogza, "Condițiile penetrației capitalului străin în România în primul deceniu după Marea Unire din 1918", in Revista de Istorie, Issue 6/1981, p. 1076
  59. ^ a b Boia, p. 16
  60. ^ a b c Isărescu, p. 33
  61. ^ Dan Berindei, "Revue des Études Sud-est Européenes", in Enciclopedia istoriografiei românești, Editura Științifică și Enciclopedică, Bucharest, 1978, p. 454
  62. ^ Brzezinski, pp. 444–445, 551
  63. ^ a b Vasile (2018), p. 595
  64. ^ a b (in Romanian) Cristian Vasile, , in Revista 22, Issue 1183, November 2012
  65. ^ (in Romanian) Florin Mihai, , in Historia, March 2012
  66. ^ Brzezinski, p. 551
  67. ^ Vasile (2018), pp. 594–595
  68. ^ Petru Comarnescu, "Jurnal", in Contemporanul, Vol. VI, Issues 23–27, July 1995, p. 11
  69. ^ Dan Popescu, "Mihail Manoilescu — schiță sumară de portret", in Transilvania, Issue 1/2019, pp. 13–14
  70. ^ "În București, acum 50 de ani", in Magazin Istoric, June 2019, p. 83
  71. ^ Kirk Laux, p. 70
  72. ^ R. Demetrescu, "Bibliorama. Echipa de conducere în unitățile economice", in Comerțul Modern, Issue 4/1972, p. 49
  73. ^ Léon Lavallée, "Les livres. Costin Murgescu, L'economie socialiste en Roumanie", in La Pensée, Issue 184, 1975, p. 139
  74. ^ Kirk Laux, pp. 71–72
  75. ^ Kirk Laux, p. 85
  76. ^ a b c Isărescu, p. 36
  77. ^ "Revue des revues. Recherches sociographiques: 312", in Revue Française de Sociologie, Vol. 8, Issue 4, 1967, pp. 593–594
  78. ^ Alexandru Puiu, "Note de lector. Afacerile cu devize ale casei regale", in Scînteia Tineretului, September 2, 1970, p. 4
  79. ^ Virgil Ionescu, "Bibliorama. Perenitatea ideilor economice ricardiene", in Comerțul Modern, Issue 4/1973, p. 55
  80. ^ "Nagysikerű tüntetés New Yorkban a történelemhamisító románok ellen", in Chicago és Környéke, Vol. 72 Issue 16, April 1977, p. 3
  81. ^ Dan Berindei, "Cel de-al XV-lea Congres Internațional de Științe Istorice: stadiul său de pregătire", in Revista de Istorie, Issue 6/1980, p. 1182
  82. ^ Elizabeth K . Valkenier, Soviet–Third World Relations: "the Economic Bind". Final Report to the National Council for Soviet and East European Research. Columbia University (National Council for Soviet and East European Research), New York City, [n. y.], pp. 50–51
  83. ^ Isărescu, pp. 34, 36
  84. ^ Mihai Ungheanu, "Cronica literară. Ion Ungureanu, Idealuri sociale și realități naționale", in Luceafărul, Vol. XXII, Issue 20, May 1989, p. 2
  85. ^ a b c Zigu Ornea, "Amintirea unui cărturar", in România Literară, Issue 36/1989, p. 9
  86. ^ Isărescu, pp. 33–36
  87. ^ Ion Boitan, "Nevoia de optimism (II)", in Cuvîntul Liber, April 24, 1990, p. 1
  88. ^ (in Romanian) Napoleon Pop, , in Revista 22, Issue 1067 (Bucureștiul Cultural supplement, Issue 96), August 2010
  89. ^ (in Romanian) , in Jurnalul Național, March 28, 2009
  90. ^ Isărescu, pp. 33, 52–53
  91. ^ a b Bogdan Murgescu, "Cuvânt înainte", in Țările Române între Imperiul Otoman și Europa creștină, Polirom, Iași, 2012, ISBN 978-973-46-2453-9, p. 11
  92. ^ "Decese", in România Liberă, September 1, 1989, p. 2
  93. ^ Henri Zalis, "Academica", in Contemporanul, Issue 34/1990, p. 2
  94. ^ Antoaneta Tănăsescu, "Consiliul Național al Audiovizualului – scurtă istorie", in Revista Română de Jurnalism și Comunicare, Issues 1–2/2008, pp. 32, 33, 35, 38
  95. ^ a b (in Romanian) Iulian Anghel, "Bogdan Murgescu, istoric al economiei: Adevărata provocare va fi când România va atinge 60% din PIB-ul UE, nu acum când are 43%", in Ziarul Financiar, March 17, 2011
  96. ^ (in Romanian) Ovidiu Pecican, "Avalon. Decalaje și întrebări", in Observator Cultural, Issue 580, June 2011
  97. ^ Isărescu, p. 34
  98. ^ Eugen Străuțiu, "Economical Think-tanks in Romania", in Revista Economică, Issues 1–2/2010, p. 14

References edit

costin, murgescu, costin, murgescu, romanian, pronunciation, kosˈtin, iˈon, murˈdʒesku, birth, name, constantin, murgescu, october, 1919, august, 1989, romanian, economist, jurist, journalist, diplomat, supporter, fascism, during, youth, switched, communism, w. Costin Ion Murgescu Romanian pronunciation kosˈtin iˈon murˈdʒesku birth name Constantin Ion Murgescu 1 October 27 1919 August 30 1989 was a Romanian economist jurist journalist and diplomat A supporter of fascism during his youth he switched to communism by the end of World War II and became an editor of the Communist Party daily organ Romania Liberă He taught at the University of Bucharest and worked for the Institute of Economic Conjecture Having campaigned for multilateralism in world affairs as early as 1944 he helped to distance Romania from the Soviet Union after 1964 and later represented his country at the United Nations He wrote extensively publishing works on the effects of land reform and industrialization on the history of economic thought and on Romania s relations with the Comecon and the First World Costin MurgescuMurgescu in September 1969BornConstantin Ion Murgescu 1919 10 27 October 27 1919Ramnicu Sărat Kingdom of RomaniaDiedAugust 30 1989 1989 08 30 aged 69 Other namesV BorceaAcademic backgroundAlma materBolyai University Bucharest Academy of Economic StudiesInfluencesPetru Comarnescu Dimitrie Gusti Mihail Manoilescu Victor Slăvescu Gheorghe ZaneAcademic workEra20th centurySchool or traditionMarxian economicsMarxist historiographyNational communismSupply side economicsInstitutionsUniversity of Bucharest Institute of Economic Conjecture Romanian Academy Institute of South East European StudiesMain interestsEconomic history political economy economic forecasting management science economic sociology political philosophy Romanian literatureInfluencedVictor Babiuc Eugen Dijmărescu Mugur Isărescu Bogdan Murgescu Napoleon Pop An innovator among the Romanian communist intellectual and professional elite Murgescu spent his final decades questioning the assumptions of Marxian economics At the Institute for World Economy which later became a branch of the Romanian Academy he trained a new generation of like minded economists Shortly before his death he was involved in dissidence against the Nicolae Ceaușescu regime Although he did not live long enough to witness the 1989 Revolution he played an indirect part in shaping the economic policies to which the country turned in post communism The estranged son of Lieutenant Colonel Murgescu a convicted war criminal Costin Murgescu was married to Ecaterina Oproiu a Romanian writer and social commentator He was survived by his nephew and disciple historian Bogdan Murgescu Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and fascist militancy 1 2 Communist turn and Romania Liberă 1 3 ICE research 1 4 National communism 1 5 Dissidence death and legacy 2 Notes 3 ReferencesBiography editEarly life and fascist militancy edit Born in Ramnicu Sărat 2 3 the future economist was the son of a Romanian Land Forces officer Ion C Murgescu 4 Young Murgescu was originally interested in jurisprudence and entered the law faculty of the University of Bucharest His beginnings were as a literary critic with an essay on the literary and artistic life of Balcic It was picked up by the magazine Familia and deemed interesting but insufficient by chroniclers at Revista Fundațiilor Regale 5 Aged nineteen Murgescu wrote a historical work about the trial of the Transylvanian Memorandum signatories 3 6 Around that time he was also a staff writer for the Oradea literary newspaper Noua Gazetă de Vest where he conducted a questionnaire survey on the state of cultural life in the provinces of Greater Romania 7 During the first years of World War II Murgescu was a supporter of the fascist Iron Guard and in his own definition a theoretician of totalitarian politics He began a collaboration with the newspaper Universul where as later recounted by his colleague Ștefan Baciu he was one of the three staff writers who showed up for work wearing the Guard s green colored shirts 8 He was also allegedly involved in brawls at the university These pitted him against students such as Dan Amedeo Lăzărescu who had defaced portraits of the Guard s founding father Corneliu Zelea Codreanu 9 Starting in August 1940 a full month before the Guard proclaimed its National Legionary regime Murgescu published a series of political musings in Universul as well as in periodicals such as Buna Vestire 1 These were soon after collected as a brochure Note pentru Statul Totalitar Notes on the Totalitarian State 10 11 12 The general conclusion of the work partly based on direct quotations from Mein Kampf was that totalitarianism moving beyond authoritarian regimes and their everyday ephemera was centered on the promise of a new man whose creation would both rehabilitate humanity and change history for eternity 10 As a literary chronicler at Universul Constantin Fantaneru saw in Murgescu that model of an author who will win people over to a doctrine simply by outlining clearly its ideas 11 In the official newspaper Țara Nicolae Ciuceanu noted With this work Mr Costin Murgescu has won himself a leading position in Romanian journalism and this accomplishment is all the more important given that the writer is presently just 24 years of age 10 The brochure quoted at length from the speeches of Benito Mussolini 11 and Iron Guard leader Horia Sima 13 Envisaging the new man as strong lively and immaculate 13 it called for a non violent moral revolution to bring Romania into the New European Order 11 It sought to rebuild culture around the Guard s Legionary spirit and promised artistic freedom only to ethnic Romanians 13 In his Universul chronicles Murgescu offered his praise to both Codreanu and the military Conducător Ion Antonescu 14 Moreover he penned warnings against the Guard s enemies those who have martyred this People no mercy for them They should expect a terrible punishment 15 He still had contributions as a literary critic such as a short introduction to Japanese poetry 16 Murgescu remained active in the press after the Guard fell from power in the violent purge of early 1941 With Antonescu as the uncontested dictator Romania became involved in the anti Soviet war as an ally of Nazi Germany Murgescu was drafted into the Romanian Land Forces but continued to write including an unpublished novel and war diary and was allowed to pass his examinations at the university 6 With his journalistic work he moved to the more mainstream review Vremea where he contributed analytical essays about the war effort In one such piece on October 25 1942 just before the crushing of Romanian forces he predicted that the Red Army was too exhausted and famished to mount an offensive 17 By 1943 his articles in Vremea and Revista Fundațiilor Regale were turning toward economics and economic history citing Victor Slăvescu as a model and inspiration 18 Murgescu s father Ion had strong pro Nazi sympathies 19 and was a willing participant in Antonescu s war crimes By September 1942 the elder Murgescu was the commandant of Vapniarka a concentration camp for Jewish deportees ordering them to be fed on grass pea which caused an outbreak of lathyrism and resulted in several deaths and many more crippling infirmities 20 21 Communist turn and Romania Liberă edit In a 1987 article L Eșanu argues that Murgescu s participation in the left wing resistance to Antonescu was already visible in January 1943 the alleged date at which the underground newspaper Romania Liberă had been set up Eșanu includes Murgescu on a list of its founders 22 As noted by historian Lucian Boia he had fully renounced his juvenile totalitarian illusions 23 by January 1944 with Romania facing the possibility of a Soviet invasion Finding himself in open conflict with his own father 19 Murgescu became a contributor to Ecoul the semi legal newspaper It published his essays against Antonescu s economic policies and the New Order which argued with a noted dialectical tinge in favor of multilateralism and an international division of labor 24 His Vremea articles arranged for print by the antifascist editor George Ivașcu looked forward to a new era of peace shaped by international cooperation According to Boia he may have been encouraged to explore the subject by the Propaganda Ministry which was sending out signals that some dignitaries were willing to sue for peace 25 During or immediately after the August 23 Coup which toppled Antonescu Murgescu involved himself with left wing political circles including the Romanian Communist Party PCR and the Union of Patriots The latter s newspaper Tribuna Poporului had him as an economic columnist from its first issue on October 16 26 As a display of his loyalty to the new regime he volunteered for war against the Nazis fought in Northern Transylvania and was badly wounded 27 He was a personal witness to the recapture of Targu Mureș in October 1944 writing a Romania Liberă reportage on this subject 28 His piece on the taking on Cluj appeared in 1945 as part of a reportage collection curated by architect George Matei Cantacuzino 29 From 1944 to 1952 6 that is to say during the early stages of the Romanian communist regime Murgescu was editor of Romania Liberă which had been taken over by the PCR In this capacity Murgescu who generally used the pen name V Borcea 1 helped organize a bureau of national and international correspondents as well as its agitprop section 27 30 He contributed various articles on national affairs and international relations praising the 1945 visit to Moscow of the PCR Minister of Transport Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej as a momentous start in Soviet Romanian relations 31 His own far right engagement in the 1930s was the object of scrutiny by Dreptatea daily put out by the opposition National Peasants Party In April 1946 its correspondent George Păun listed Murgescu George Macovescu and Dumitru Corbea as communist propagandists who had previously served the fascist cause 32 In late 1945 Murgescu was employed by the communized Propaganda Ministry and the Siguranța detectives the latter of whom vetted him as a regime loyalist noting his friendship with PCR activists such as Simion Oeriu and Grigore Preoteasa 1 Invited by the Fatherland Front in neighboring Bulgaria Murgescu witnessed first hand the Bulgarian legislative elections on October 27 1946 he was part of a journalists delegation that also comprised Aurel Baranga Paul Georgescu Ștefan Tita and Gheorghe Zaharia 33 Ahead of Romania s own elections in November Murgescu played down Peasantist concerns about vote rigging and intimidation and declared such claims to be part of a ploy against the leftist parties in government His statements were polemically reviewed by Dreptatea which introduced him as bine sic cunoscutul legionar that notorious Guardist 34 He was also a prominent contributor to the communist literary magazine Contemporanul where he praised the party for its consolidation of democracy 35 His first theoretical work appeared in 1947 outlining his belief that the new economic regime would be based on the development of heavy industry 36 In August 1948 Veac Nou magazine put out by the Romanian Society for Friendship with the Soviet Union featured his article on Soviet Romanian economic cooperation rendering his belief that Soviet backing was crucial for both Romania s industrial development and her consolidation as a people s democracy 37 Around 1950 Murgescu married Ecaterina Oproiu a fellow Romania Liberă journalist who went on to establish the official film magazine Cinema 27 30 She later achieved fame in her own right as Romania s first ever television critic 38 and a promoter of socialist feminism 39 Following the country s change of orientation Murgescu s father had found himself arrested and appeared before the Romanian People s Tribunals in April 1945 20 He was initially sentenced to death and some authors believe that he was executed 40 However his sentence was commuted to life imprisonment with hard labor on June 1 1945 41 Passing through the notorious Aiud prison 42 he may have still been alive during the mid 1950s 19 ICE research edit Expelled from Romania Liberă following an inquiry into his social origins 6 and having to explain his attitude toward his father the war criminal 43 Murgescu focused entirely on his work in economics From 1953 to 1956 he was a scientific researcher in the political economy department of the University of Bucharest 2 6 43 He later joined the team of economists and statisticians at the Institute of Economic Conjecture ICE located in Bucharest This institution was headed by Gogu Rădulescu a disgraced and sidelined PCR activist Rădulescu appointed Murgescu head of the National Economy Section and deputy ICE Director 44 At the time the ICE also offered employment to the formerly repressed scholar Gheorghe Zane who was protected by the PCR eminence Alexandru Barlădeanu 45 and who as Murgescu put it was thus allowed to continue his interwar research with input from dialectical materialism 46 Murgescu himself was assigned to work on an economic overview of the 1945 land reform which he published in 1956 at Editura Academiei Writing at the time Marxist philosopher Erno Gall suggested that Murgescu s tract offered rich and convincing material about the pauperization of Romania s peasant class before and during World War II 47 As noted in 2009 by scholars Dorin Dobrincu and Constantin Iordachi the study written during the Stalinist years has limited analytical value but still stands out as the only land reform monograph in domestic historical writing under communism 48 As noted by historian Cristian Vasile Murgescu s work was politicized and presented praise of Gheorghiu Dej now the regime leader voiced in terms similar to his earlier panegyrics for Codreanu 43 In his private conversations with a colleague G Iosub he complain ed that the executive power never took his forecasts into account that no minister would even glance over them 49 By the end of the 1950s with a slight relaxation of communist censorship he tried to promote a reevaluation of interwar Romanian sociology and organized at the ICE work groups that were basing themselves on Dimitrie Gusti s sociological research teams 50 51 These rural expeditions recounted by Murgescu s articles in Contemporanul August 1957 allowed for a discussion of collectivization which they presented as a relevant success particularly so in the model regions of Constanța and Hunedoara 52 Also in Contemporanul Murgescu published an essay that sought to rehabilitate Gusti but his effort was smothered by the Communist Party in 1959 50 At the ICE in 1958 he came into conflict with his superior Miron Constantinescu and was afterward demoted to department head 53 According to fellow economist Egon Balas Murgescu was also able to use political censorship for his own gains manufacturing a conflict with Constantinescu who was a somewhat dissenting communist and obtaining his ousting As a result of this intrigue Murgescu became sole editor of the ICE academic journal Revista Economică in 1958 54 He also resumed his position as second director but was placed under tight surveillance by Securitate agents in 1959 according to Vasile he was most likely recruited as a Securitate informant code name Barbu Rimniceanu and tasked with reporting on the activities of former fascists such as Bucur Țincu and Ion Veverca 43 His position at the Institute mirrored that of Ion Rachmuth an unusual situation in which a former Guardist and a Jewish man once exposed to racial persecution had to report to each other on a daily basis 55 Making occasional returns to the field of Marxist economic history Murgescu wrote propaganda works accusing the deposed Romanian royal family and in particular Carol II of having organized a plunder of Romanian assets 56 In 1960 the anticommunist Romanian diaspora stood accused by the communists of covering up for fascism In reply the Paris based magazine La Nation Roumaine published ample revelations about the fascist past of Murgescu Mihai Ralea Mihu Dragomir and various other figures of the new regime 57 Also in 1960 Murgescu and N N Constantinescu were editors of a major economic history tract Contribuții la istoria capitalului străin in Rominia Contributions to the History of Foreign Capital in Romania This work also put out by Editura Academiei was revisited some 20 years later by historian Vasile Bogza who noted that despite some flawed interpretations it remained one of the thorough studies in the field 58 A University of Bucharest professor 59 Murgescu was received as a corresponding member of the Romanian Academy in 1963 earning a doctorate in economics from the Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies in 1964 2 60 He also served the Institute of South East European Studies as an academic supervisor for its Revue des Etudes Sud est Europeenes 61 National communism edit By 1963 Murgescu was called upon by the regime to inform the world about Romania s economic ideology which was increasingly de satellized and altogether different from Soviet policies That year he denounced the Comecon s pseudo theories on industrialization which seemed to offer Romania a subservient economic position within the common market 62 In 1964 the PCR leadership called upon Murgescu to publish an even more virulent official reply against the Soviets and the Comecon By advancing a Valev Plan the Soviets had suggested that Romania become an agricultural hinterland for the more industrialized socialist countries Murgescu s selection by the regime was an implicit recognition of his scholarly authority 63 his critique of the Valev proposal also announced a new political stage of national communism 27 30 64 65 His articles called for a reform of the Comecon and defying the Sino Soviet split suggested the accession of China 66 With the inauguration of Nicolae Ceaușescu as Party Secretary and later President of Romania Murgescu had more opportunities to expand on his economic theories Serving only as ICE department head from 1965 67 he continued to edit Revista Economică to 1968 then Revista Romană de Relații Internaționale from 1968 to 1970 2 50 In parallel he was taken on as an adviser by Ion Gheorghe Maurer who was serving as President of the Council of Ministers 63 In 1967 he declared his new interest in exploring national specificity commending the old regime intellectuals Zane and Petru Comarnescu for their work in that field 68 He also partook in the effort to reassess Mihail Manoilescu as the interwar doctrinaire of economic nationalism and is regarded by economist Dan Popescu as Manoilescu s intellectual heir 69 From June 1969 he had a Tuesday evening show on Radio Romania as part of the series Tableta de Seară which also featured among others actor Radu Beligan mathematician Grigore Moisil writer Marin Sorescu and literary scholar Edgar Papu 70 Murgescu moved from ICE to the Institute for World Economy IEM where he worked from 1970 until his death 2 60 and was for a while its director 59 In 1976 he was elected Vice President of the International Marketing Federation 2 3 The Romanian position regarding the Comecon was given expression in a 1969 tract Romania socialistă și cooperarea internațională Socialist Romania and International Cooperation which came out at Editura Politică with Murgescu Mircea Malița and Gheorghe Surpat as the three authors 71 In 1971 the same venue put out Murgescu s tract on team management within the socialist economy which he theorized as a function of democratic centralism 72 In 1974 he published at Editura Meridiane the French language introduction L economie socialiste en Roumanie Romania s Socialist Economy It explained the regime s policy of cooperating with the West in industrial development and scientific research noting that socialist economies had to catch up with capitalism before the latter could experience a final crisis 73 According to Canadian economist Jeanne Kirk Laux Murgescu was trying to reconcile Romania s relations with multinational corporations with Ceaușescu s national sovereignty obsession 74 Indirectly the book documents the regime s efforts to compensate for the high price of Western technology by proposing various methods of counter trade methods which Kirk Laux notes Murgescu claimed as original Romanian contributions to the theory of international trade 75 Murgescu was particularly interested in Romanian economic history in relation to the global economy and a pioneer of interdisciplinarity 76 In 1967 he returned to sociology by contributing to a collective study on the effects of industrialization on social mobility 77 He was again focused on exposing the old monarchic system as a vehicle for economic fraud his 1970 tract about the royal family s role in market manipulation was welcomed by Alexandru Puiu in the communist paper Scinteia Tineretului As argued by Puiu the book was one of irreproachable scientific standing though also a minute expose of a robbery in all its ugliness 78 In 1972 Murgescu put out a biography of ideas for David Ricardo analyzed within the larger context of the Industrial Revolution 79 During early 1977 the School of International and Public Affairs in New York City played host to a delegation of Romanian historians including Murgescu Virgil Candea Constantin C Giurescu Ștefan Pascu and the President s brother Ilie Ceaușescu Their lectures were picketed by protestors who argued that national communism was a form of Stalinism and that it directly threatened the community life of Hungarians in Romania 80 With Damian Hurezeanu Murgescu was a guest of the 15th International Congress of Historical Sciences Bucharest 1980 where they presented a new synthesis of land reform policies in interwar Romania 81 A Romanian Ambassador to the United Nations in the early 1980s 30 Murgescu also served for a while as ECOSOC President 2 3 He published his notes on the New International Economic Order in Partners in East West Economic Relations a collection of studies edited by Zoltan Fallenbuchl and C H McMillan for Pergamon Press They outlined Romania s support for the New International Economic Order and her critique of the Soviet Union As Murgescu argued the Soviet economy was to be taxed the same as a capitalist developed country when contributing to the United Nations Development Programme 82 Dissidence death and legacy edit Murgescu followed up with several studies of his own In 1980 he put together Zane s complete works with his own preface His effort was praised by Candea who recommended that Murgescu expand his contribution into a Zane monograph 46 The series also includes his signature work Mersul ideilor economice la romani The Development of Economic Ideas among the Romanians appearing as two volumes in 1987 and 1990 respectively 3 83 The initial volume was welcomed by literary critic Mihai Ungheanu as a contribution to the necessary recovery of Romanian values in social and economic thinking alongside contributions by Ilie Bădescu and Ion Ungureanu 84 The work was instead met with criticism by the literary sociologist Zigu Ornea sparking a debate which was to be Murgescu s last 85 Murgescu spent the last stage of his life as a dissident in latent conflict with President Ceaușescu At the IEM he helped organize debates about politics and economics introduced Romanian students to the core notions of supply side economics and made hints about the need for profound change 86 Murgescu s 1982 work on the Japanese economic miracle was done from personal observations from his extended trip there overall he concluded that Japanese companies had fully focused on technological innovation and had planned ahead with a focus on such changes 87 It was a Romanian best seller 76 Allegedly Murgescu had come to believe that the Valev Plan was a consistent form of economic integration and that national communism was essentially flawed 64 Foreign Minister Ștefan Andrei shielded Murgescu from Ceaușescu s anger and allowed him to maintain a link with the West through contacts with Reuters 88 Another inner PCR dissident and former diplomat Silviu Brucan indicated Murgescu as one of his main sources for critical reports which were sent to foreign ambassadors in Romania 89 Murgescu died a few months before the anti communist Revolution of December 1989 3 90 91 He was buried at Bellu Cemetery on September 2 92 Obituary pieces included one by Ornea He quoted Murgescu s letter to him in which the economist had applauded any constructive debate between men of culture 85 Murgescu had left several unpublished texts including parts of a sequel to Mersul ideilor 85 but also Drumul oilor The Sheep s Road which detailed the economic history of sheep farming in Romania The latter text was carried in a December 1990 issue of Academica journal with an introduction by Mircea Măciu in turn criticized in Contemporanul for stretching Murgescu s conclusions and for using the wooden language of official Marxism 93 Murgescu was survived by his wife Ecaterina Oproiu who went on to serve as a Presidential appointee on a visual media regulatory agency the National Audiovisual Council between 1992 and 2000 94 Murgescu s nephew Bogdan Murgescu also trained in economic history and achieved notoriety for his analysis of economic backwardness 95 96 He credits Costin Murgescu as an early influence on his own work 91 Mersul ideilor reissued by the National Bank of Romania presses in 1994 76 was complemented by the posthumous Drumurile unității romanești The Paths of Romanian Unity 1996 3 As a learning institution the IEM was the alma mater of economists who rose to political prominence after 1989 among them Eugen Dijmărescu Mugur Isărescu Napoleon Pop and Victor Babiuc 97 95 In 1990 it was renamed the Costin Murgescu Institute of World Economy becoming part of the Romanian Academy network 98 According to Isărescu At the Institute for World Economy professor Costin Murgescu was able to fulfill his calling on many levels Constantly preoccupied with establishing a Romanian school of economic research he turned the IEM into a veritable creative workshop 60 As noted in 2010 by sociologist Zoltan Rostas Murgescu s sinuous youth was hardly mentioned but he was nearly sanctified by the elite of economists who are now in their sixties 50 Notes edit a b c d Vasile 2018 p 586 a b c d e f g Laurențiu Guțescu Ion Bold Marius Băcescu Oameni de seamă economiști Editura Mica Valahie 2013 ISBN 978 606830 457 1 pp 365 366 a b c d e f g in Romanian Costin Murgescu at the Bank Deposit Guarantee Fund site Balas p 336 Vasile 2018 p 587 Revista revistelor in Revista Fundațiilor Regale Issue 12 1938 p 714 a b c d e Isărescu p 32 Anca Filipovici O incursiune in presa culturală interbelică din provincie localismul creator ca simptom al periferiei in nordul Moldovei in Raduț Bilbiie Mihaela Teodor eds Elita culturală și presa Congresul Național de istorie a presei ediția a VI a Editura Militară Bucharest 2013 ISBN 978 973 32 0922 5 pp 267 268 Centenar Radu Gyr in Biblioteca Bucureștilor Issue 3 2005 p 13 Pană la ora 12 Note și comentarii Evoluție in Dreptatea June 12 1946 p 4 a b c Nicolae Ciuceanu Țara culturală Note pentru Statul Totalitar in Țara December 16 1941 p 2 a b c d Constantin Fantaneru Cronica literară Costin I Murgescu Note pentru Statul Totalitar in Universul Literar Issue 45 1940 p 2 Boia pp 164 165 a b c Note in Preocupări Literare Revista Societății Prietenii Istoriei Literare Issue 11 1940 pp 697 698 Boia pp 164 165 234 291 Boia p 165 Costin I Murgescu O prezentare lirică a Japoniei in Revista Fundațiilor Regale Issue 12 1940 pp 690 696 Boia p 231 Costin I Murgescu Victor Slăvescu și posibilitatea unei istorii a gandirii noastre economice in Revista Fundațiilor Regale Issue 11 1943 pp 463 467 a b c Balas p 336 a b Maiorul Murgescu confruntat cu victimele din lagărul Vapniarca Ați intrat sănătoși și veți ieși in carje de aci le spune maiorul Murgescu victimelor in Timpul April 5 1945 p 1 Dr Arthur Kessler 1903 2000 in Lathyrus Lathyrism Newsletter Vol 3 pp 3 4 Dennis Deletant Hitler s Forgotten Ally Ion Antonescu and His Regime Romania 1940 1944 Palgrave Macmillan London 2006 ISBN 1 4039 9341 6 p 197 Kornis pp 228 229 L Eșanu Sublinieri 15 August Ziua presei romane Tradiții revoluționare in Ateneu Issue 8 1987 p 2 Boia p 234 Angela Banciu Din propaganda rezistenței antifasciste romanești Ziarul Ecoul și rolul său intre anii 1943 1944 in Revista de Istorie Issue 7 1989 pp 697 698 Boia pp 234 235 Valentin Silvestru 1944 1983 in Teatrul Issue 3 1983 p 84 a b c d in Romanian Virgil Lazăr RL 135 de ani Prima femeie la carma Romaniei Libere in Romania Liberă March 6 2012 Vasile Budrigă Luptele purtate pentru eliberarea Romaniei de sub dominația fascistă reflectate in presa centrală romanească a timpului 23 august 25 octombrie 1944 in Revista Muzeelor și Monumentelor Issue 5 1985 pp 54 56 M N R G M Cantacuzino și Galeria Eroilor in Săptămina Issue 36 1988 p 3 a b c d in Romanian Virgil Lazăr Planul Valev făcut praf de Romania Liberă in Romania Liberă February 3 2011 in Romanian Cristina Diac Stație in drumul spre putere in Jurnalul Național January 10 2006 George Păun Scanteia apreciază in Dreptatea April 7 1946 p 3 Ultimele știri Buletin intern in Moldova Liberă October 24 1946 p 4 Pană la ora 12 Note și comentarii Tactică in Dreptatea October 24 1946 p 4 Boia p 291 Vasile 2018 pp 586 587 A apărut Veac Nou No 15 August 1948 in Frontul Plugarilor August 1 1948 p 3 Alexandru Matei Screening the Thaw Era Romanian Television in the 60s as a Public Service Television in The French Journal for Media Research Issue 2 2014 Luciana Jinga Citoyennete et Travail des Femmes dans la Roumanie Communiste in History of Communism in Europe Vol 3 2012 pp 98 107 Petruța Teampău Femeia Constructorul unei vieți noi și mamă de constructori Corp gen și ideologie in propaganda comunistă a anilor 70 in Hajnalka Harbula Eniko Magyari Vincze eds ANTHROPO Lenyomatok Amprente Imprints Cultural Analysis Series 13 EFES amp Fundația Desire Cluj 2008 ISBN 978 606 526 004 7 pp 97 98 100 Kornis p 230 Partea I a Decrete Ministerul Justiției in Monitorul Oficial June 2 1945 pp 4597 4598 Emil Niculescu Unde sunt cei care nu mai sunt File din drama armatei regale romane in Străjer in Calea Furtunilor Issue 12 2012 p 53 a b c d Vasile 2018 p 587 Balas p 335 Vasile 2018 p 584 a b Virgil Candea G Zane de la economie la istorie in Flacăra Issue 36 1980 p 20 Erno Gall Caracterul neștiințific și antiprogresist al sociologiei țărăniste in Buletinul Universităților V Babeș și Bolyai Cluj Vols 1 2 1956 pp 20 21 Dorin Dobrincu Constantin Iordachi Introduction in Transforming Peasants Property and Power The Collectivization of Agriculture in Romania 1949 1962 Central European University Press Budapest amp New York City 2009 ISBN 978 963 9776 25 8 p 6 G Iosub Da da țărani evrei in Romania De vorbă cu dr Avram Rosen doctor in economie in Minimum Vol XIV Issue 157 April 2000 p 19 a b c d in Romanian Iulia Popovici Zoltan Rostas Gusti nu era anticomunist nici antilegionar Era prevăzător I in Observator Cultural Issue 520 April 2010 Ștefan Bosomitu Notes and Remarks on the Re Institutionalization of Sociology in Communist Romania in the 60s in History of Communism in Europe Vol 2 2011 pp 181 183 Mara Mărginean From Printed Word to Bureaucratic Negotiation Housing Projects for Workers during the 1950s in Romania in sITA studies in History amp Theory of Architecture Vol 1 2013 p 129 Vasile 2018 pp 587 590 Balas pp 357 358 Vasile 2018 pp 587 588 in Romanian Andreea Lupșor Carol al II lea in istoriografia comunistă in Historia August 2013 Nicolae Florescu Reevaluări Vintilă Horia și utopia narativă II in Acolada Issue 6 2013 p 19 Vasile Bogza Condițiile penetrației capitalului străin in Romania in primul deceniu după Marea Unire din 1918 in Revista de Istorie Issue 6 1981 p 1076 a b Boia p 16 a b c Isărescu p 33 Dan Berindei Revue des Etudes Sud est Europeenes in Enciclopedia istoriografiei romanești Editura Științifică și Enciclopedică Bucharest 1978 p 454 Brzezinski pp 444 445 551 a b Vasile 2018 p 595 a b in Romanian Cristian Vasile Cartea nevrozelor in Revista 22 Issue 1183 November 2012 in Romanian Florin Mihai Ceaușescu invidios pe succesul lui Dej in Historia March 2012 Brzezinski p 551 Vasile 2018 pp 594 595 Petru Comarnescu Jurnal in Contemporanul Vol VI Issues 23 27 July 1995 p 11 Dan Popescu Mihail Manoilescu schiță sumară de portret in Transilvania Issue 1 2019 pp 13 14 In București acum 50 de ani in Magazin Istoric June 2019 p 83 Kirk Laux p 70 R Demetrescu Bibliorama Echipa de conducere in unitățile economice in Comerțul Modern Issue 4 1972 p 49 Leon Lavallee Les livres Costin Murgescu L economie socialiste en Roumanie in La Pensee Issue 184 1975 p 139 Kirk Laux pp 71 72 Kirk Laux p 85 a b c Isărescu p 36 Revue des revues Recherches sociographiques 312 in Revue Francaise de Sociologie Vol 8 Issue 4 1967 pp 593 594 Alexandru Puiu Note de lector Afacerile cu devize ale casei regale in Scinteia Tineretului September 2 1970 p 4 Virgil Ionescu Bibliorama Perenitatea ideilor economice ricardiene in Comerțul Modern Issue 4 1973 p 55 Nagysikeru tuntetes New Yorkban a tortenelemhamisito romanok ellen in Chicago es Kornyeke Vol 72 Issue 16 April 1977 p 3 Dan Berindei Cel de al XV lea Congres Internațional de Științe Istorice stadiul său de pregătire in Revista de Istorie Issue 6 1980 p 1182 Elizabeth K Valkenier Soviet Third World Relations the Economic Bind Final Report to the National Council for Soviet and East European Research Columbia University National Council for Soviet and East European Research New York City n y pp 50 51 Isărescu pp 34 36 Mihai Ungheanu Cronica literară Ion Ungureanu Idealuri sociale și realități naționale in Luceafărul Vol XXII Issue 20 May 1989 p 2 a b c Zigu Ornea Amintirea unui cărturar in Romania Literară Issue 36 1989 p 9 Isărescu pp 33 36 Ion Boitan Nevoia de optimism II in Cuvintul Liber April 24 1990 p 1 in Romanian Napoleon Pop Am privit BNR cu respect ca pe o instituție intangibilă in Revista 22 Issue 1067 Bucureștiul Cultural supplement Issue 96 August 2010 in Romanian Ancheta lui Brucan in Jurnalul Național March 28 2009 Isărescu pp 33 52 53 a b Bogdan Murgescu Cuvant inainte in Țările Romane intre Imperiul Otoman și Europa creștină Polirom Iași 2012 ISBN 978 973 46 2453 9 p 11 Decese in Romania Liberă September 1 1989 p 2 Henri Zalis Academica in Contemporanul Issue 34 1990 p 2 Antoaneta Tănăsescu Consiliul Național al Audiovizualului scurtă istorie in Revista Romană de Jurnalism și Comunicare Issues 1 2 2008 pp 32 33 35 38 a b in Romanian Iulian Anghel Bogdan Murgescu istoric al economiei Adevărata provocare va fi cand Romania va atinge 60 din PIB ul UE nu acum cand are 43 in Ziarul Financiar March 17 2011 in Romanian Ovidiu Pecican Avalon Decalaje și intrebări in Observator Cultural Issue 580 June 2011 Isărescu p 34 Eugen Străuțiu Economical Think tanks in Romania in Revista Economică Issues 1 2 2010 p 14References editEgon Balas Will to Freedom A Perilous Journey through Fascism and Communism Syracuse University Press Syracuse 2000 ISBN 0 8156 0930 2 Lucian Boia Capcanele istoriei Elita intelectuală romanească intre 1930 și 1950 Humanitas Bucharest 2012 ISBN 978 973 50 3533 4 Zbigniew Brzezinski The Soviet Bloc Unity and Conflict Harvard University Press Cambridge 1967 ISBN 0 674 82548 9 Mugur Isărescu Reflecții economice Piețe bani bănci Centrul Roman de Economie Comparată și Consens Bucharest 2006 ISBN 973 618 106 5 Jeanne Kirk Laux La Roumanie et les multinationales in Revue d Etudes Comparatives Est Ouest Vol 12 Issue 4 1981 pp 61 89 Geza Kornis Fragmente din Memorii Din viaṭa mea și vremurile mele in Smaranda Vultur Adrian Onică eds Memoria salvată II West University of Timișoara 2009 ISBN 978 973 125 265 0 pp 213 238 Cristian Vasile Institutul de Cercetări Economice al Academiei RPR 1952 1965 intre analiză științifică și propagandă ideologică in Revista Istorică Vol XXIX Issues 5 6 2018 pp 577 600 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Costin Murgescu amp oldid 1218125454, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.