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John Kenneth Galbraith

John Kenneth Galbraith[a] OC (October 15, 1908 – April 29, 2006), also known as Ken Galbraith, was a Canadian American economist, diplomat, public official, and intellectual. His books on economic topics were bestsellers from the 1950s through the 2000s. As an economist, he leaned toward post-Keynesian economics from an institutionalist perspective.[1][2]

John Kenneth Galbraith
Galbraith in 1962
7th United States Ambassador to India
In office
April 18, 1961 – July 12, 1963
PresidentJohn F. Kennedy
Preceded byEllsworth Bunker
Succeeded byChester Bowles
Personal details
Born(1908-10-15)October 15, 1908
Iona Station, Ontario, Canada
DiedApril 29, 2006(2006-04-29) (aged 97)
Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S.
Spouse
(m. 1937)
Children4, including Peter and James
Alma materOntario Agricultural College (BSAg)
University of California, Berkeley (MA, PhD)
Academic career
Institution
InfluencesThorstein Veblen, Adam Smith, Karl Marx, John Maynard Keynes, Michał Kalecki, Gardiner Means, Adolf A. Berle
ContributionsCountervailing power, technostructure, conventional wisdom
AwardsLomonosov Gold Medal (1993)
Officer of the Order of Canada (1997)
Presidential Medal of Freedom (2000)

Galbraith was a long-time Harvard faculty member and stayed with Harvard University for half a century as a professor of economics.[3] He was a prolific author and wrote four dozen books, including several novels, and published more than a thousand articles and essays on various subjects. Among his works was a trilogy on economics, American Capitalism (1952), The Affluent Society (1958), and The New Industrial State (1967). Some of his work has been criticized by economists Milton Friedman, Paul Krugman, Robert Solow, and Thomas Sowell.

Galbraith was active in Democratic Party politics, serving in the administrations of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S. Truman, John F. Kennedy, and Lyndon B. Johnson. He served as United States Ambassador to India under the Kennedy administration. His political activism, literary output and outspokenness brought him wide fame during his lifetime.[4][5] Galbraith was one of the few to receive both the World War II Medal of Freedom (1946) and the Presidential Medal of Freedom (2000) for his public service and contributions to science.

Life edit

Early life edit

Galbraith was born on October 15, 1908, to Canadians of Scottish descent, Sarah Catherine (Kendall) and Archibald "Archie" Galbraith, in Iona Station, Ontario, Canada, and was raised in Dunwich Township, Ontario.[6] He had three siblings: Alice, Catherine, and Archibald William (Bill). By the time he was a teenager, he had adopted the name Ken, and later disliked being called John.[7] Galbraith grew to be a very tall man, attaining a height of 6 feet 9 inches (206 cm).[8]

His father was a farmer, school teacher, president of a cooperative insurance company, and local official of the Liberal Party. His mother, a homemaker and a community activist, died when he was fourteen years old.[7] The family farm was located on Thomson Line. Both of his parents were supporters of the United Farmers of Ontario in the 1920s.

His early years were spent at a one-room school which is still standing, on 9468 Willey Road, in Iona Station.[9] Later, he went to Dutton High School and St. Thomas High School. In 1931, Galbraith graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture from the Ontario Agricultural College, which was then an associate agricultural college of the University of Toronto. He majored in animal husbandry. He was awarded a Giannini Scholarship in Agricultural Economics (receiving $60 per month)[7] that allowed him to travel to Berkeley, California, where he received masters and Doctor of Philosophy degrees in agricultural economics from the University of California, Berkeley. Galbraith was taught economics by Professor George Martin Peterson, and together they wrote an economics paper titled "The Concept of Marginal Land" in 1932 that was published in the American Journal of Agricultural Economics.[10]

After graduation in 1934, he started to work as an instructor at Harvard University. Galbraith taught intermittently at Harvard in the period 1934 to 1939.[5] From 1939 to 1940, he taught at Princeton University. In 1937, he became a citizen of the United States and was no longer a British subject.[b] In the same year, he took a year-long fellowship at the University of Cambridge, England, where he was influenced by John Maynard Keynes. He then traveled in Europe for several months in 1938, attending an international economic conference and developing his ideas.[11] He served for a few months in summer 1934 in the U.S. Department of Agriculture.[12] As a Harvard teacher in 1938 he was given charge of a research project for the National Resources Planning Board.[13][14] From 1943 until 1948, he served as an editor of Fortune magazine. In 1949, he was appointed professor of economics at Harvard. He also taught at the Harvard Extension School.[15]

World War II edit

 
Photograph was taken between 1940 and 1946 "I react pragmatically. Where the market works, I'm for that. Where the government is necessary, I'm for that. I'm deeply suspicious of somebody who says, 'I'm in favor of privatization,' or, 'I'm deeply in favor of public ownership.' I'm in favor of whatever works in the particular case." — C-SPAN, November 13, 1994[16]

The United States went into WWII with an economy still not fully recovered from the Great Depression.[17] Because wartime production needs mandated large budget deficits and an accommodating monetary policy, inflation and a runaway wage-price spiral were seen as likely.[18] As a part of a team charged with keeping inflation from damaging the war effort, Galbraith served as a deputy administrator of the Office of Price Administration (OPA) during World War II in 1941–1943. The OPA directed the process of stabilization of prices and rents.[19]

On May 11, 1941, President Roosevelt created the Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply (OPACS). On August 28, 1941, it became the Office of Price Administration (OPA). After the US entered the war in December 1941, OPA was tasked with rationing and price controls. The Emergency Price Control Act passed on January 30, 1942, legitimized the OPA as a separate federal agency. It merged OPA with two other agencies: Consumer Protection Division and Price Stabilization Division of the Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense.[20] The council was referred to as the National Defense Advisory Commission (NDAC), and was created on May 29, 1940.[21] NDAC emphasized voluntary and advisory methods in keeping prices low. Leon Henderson, the NDAC commissioner for price stabilization, became the administrator of OPACS and of OPA in 1941–1942. He oversaw a mandatory and vigorous price regulation that started in May 1942 after OPA introduced the General Maximum Price Regulation (GMPR). It was much criticized by the business community. In response, OPA mobilized the public on behalf of the new guidelines and said that it reduced the options for those who were seeking higher rents or prices. OPA had its own Enforcement Division, which documented the increase of violations: a quarter million in 1943 and more than 300,000 during the next year.[21]

Historians and economists differ over the assessment of the OPA activities, which started with six people, but then grew to 15,000 staffers.[22][23] Some of them point to the fact that price increases were relatively lower than during the First World War, and that the overall economy grew faster. Steven Pressman, for example, wrote that "when the controls were removed there was only a small increase in prices, thereby demonstrating that inflationary pressures were actively managed and not just kept temporarily under control."[24] Galbraith said in an interview that he considered his work at the OPA as his major life achievement, since prices were relatively stable during WWII.[23] The role of the OPA, however, as well as the whole legacy of the US government wartime economic stabilization measures from a long-term perspective, remains debated. Richard Parker, who earlier had written a well regarded biography of Galbraith had this to say about Galbraith's efforts during the war:

[H]e had first gone to work in the nation's capital in 1934 as a 25-year-old, fresh out of graduate school and just about to join the Harvard faculty as a young instructor. He had returned to Washington in mid-1940, after Paris fell to the Germans, initially to help ready the nation for war. Eighteen months later, after Pearl Harbor, he was then appointed to oversee the wartime economy as "price czar," charged with preventing inflation and corrupt price-gouging from devastating the economy as it swelled to produce the weapons and materiel needed to guarantee victory against fascism. In this, he and his colleagues at the Office of Price Administration had been stunningly successful, guiding an economy that quadrupled in size in less than five years without fanning the inflation that had haunted World War I, or leaving behind an unbalanced post-war collapse of the kind that had done such grievous damage to Europe in the 1920s.[25]

Opposition to the OPA came from conservatives in Congress and the business community. It undercut Galbraith and he was forced out in May 1943, accused of "communistic tendencies".[26] He was promptly hired by Henry Luce, a conservative Republican and a dominant figure in American media as publisher of Time and Fortune magazines. Galbraith worked for Luce for five years and expounded Keynesianism to the American business leadership.[27] Luce allegedly said to President Kennedy, "I taught Galbraith how to write—and have regretted it ever since."[28] Galbraith saw his role as educating the entire nation on how the economy worked, including the role of big corporations. He was combining his writing with numerous speeches to business groups and local Democratic party meetings, as well as frequently testifying before Congress.[29]

During the late stages of WWII in 1945, Galbraith was invited by Paul Nitze to serve as one of the "Officers" of the Strategic Bombing Survey, initiated by the Office of Strategic Services. It was designed to assess the results of the aerial bombardments of Nazi Germany.[30] The survey found that German war production went up rather than down as German cities were being bombed. Henderson (2006) wrote, 'Galbraith had to fight hard to have his report published without it being rewritten to hide the essential points. "I defended it," he wrote, "with a maximum of arrogance and a minimum of tact."' Those findings created a controversy, with Nitze siding with others of the "Officers" managing the survey and with Pentagon officials, who declared the opposite. Later, Galbraith described the willingness of public servants and institutions to bend the truth to please the Pentagon as the "Pentagonania syndrome".[31]

Postwar edit

In February 1946, Galbraith took a leave of absence from his magazine work for a senior position in the State Department as director of the Office of Economic Security Policy where he was nominally in charge of economic affairs regarding Germany, Japan, Austria, and South Korea. Distrusted by senior diplomats, he was relegated to routine work, with few opportunities to make policy.[32] Galbraith favored détente with the Soviet Union, along with Secretary of State James F. Byrnes and General Lucius D. Clay, a military governor of the US Zone in Germany from 1947 to 1949,[28] but they were out of step with the containment policy then being developed by George Kennan and favored by the majority of the US major policymakers. After a disconcerting half-year, Galbraith resigned in September 1946 and went back to his magazine writing on economics issues.[33][34] Later, he immortalized his frustration with "the ways of Foggy Bottom" in a satirical novel, The Triumph (1968).[35] The postwar period also was memorable for Galbraith because of his work, along with Eleanor Roosevelt and Hubert Humphrey, to establish a progressive policy organization Americans for Democratic Action (ADA) in support of the cause of economic and social justice in 1947. In 1952, Galbraith's friends Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. and George Ball recruited him to work as a speechwriter for the Democratic candidate, Adlai Stevenson.[36] The involvement of several intellectuals from the ADA in the Stevenson campaign attracted controversy as the Republican Senator Joseph McCarthy accused the ADA intellectuals as being "tainted" by "well documented Red associations"; Galbraith later said one of his regrets was that McCarthy failed to condemn him as one of Stevenson's "red" advisers.[37]

Kennedy administration edit

 
Galbraith, first at left, as US ambassador to India, with President John F. Kennedy, Vice-President Lyndon B. Johnson, and Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India, 1961

During his time as an adviser to President John F. Kennedy, Galbraith was appointed United States Ambassador to India from 1961 to 1963. His rapport with President Kennedy was such that he regularly bypassed the State Department and sent his diplomatic cables directly to the president.[38] Galbraith disliked his superior, the Secretary of State, Dean Rusk, writing to Kennedy that trying to communicate via Rusk was "like trying to fornicate through a mattress".[39] In India, he became a confidant of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and extensively advised the Indian government on economic matters.

India was considered by Kennedy to be important not just in its own right, but also because an Indian diplomat always served as the chief commissioner of the International Control Commission (ICC), and thus in this way, Galbraith came to be involved in American policy towards Southeast Asia from his perch as an ambassador in New Delhi.[40] In 1961, when Kennedy considered intervening in the civil war in Laos, Galbraith strongly advised him not to, warning him that the disaster of the Bay of Pigs invasion had been caused by Kennedy taking the advice offered by the hawkish Joint Chiefs of Staff who had assured him that the invasion could not fail and were now saying the same about the proposed intervention in Laos.[41] Galbraith also noted that the ICC was also responsible for Laos as well as the two Vietnams, and he had Nehru's word that the Indian diplomats on the ICC were willing to serve as honest brokers for a peace deal to make Laos neutral in the Cold War.[42]

In May 1961, the Indian ICC members had been able to broker a ceasefire in Laos and Kennedy decided to go for the neutralization option instead of war.[43] During the talks in Geneva to discuss a solution to the Lao crisis, the chief American delegate, W. Averell Harriman, discovered the Chinese foreign minister, Chen Yi, was willing to meet him in private.[44] However, Rusk forbade Harriman to talk to Chen under any conditions, fearful of Republican attacks against the Democrat Kennedy if the meetings should come out to the media, causing Harriman to explode in rage that in World War Two, Roosevelt had allowed him to meet whoever was necessary.[45] Unable to change Rusk's mind, Harriman appealed to Galbraith who in his turn appealed to Kennedy.[45] Kennedy granted permission for Harriman to meet Chen, provided that it was done under the strictest secrecy, but by that time, Chen had returned to Beijing.[45] In May 1961, when Vice President Lyndon Johnson visited India, Galbraith had the duty of escorting him around various sites in India and attempting to explain some of his Texas mannerisms such as his shouts of "yee-hah!" that he made when he saw the Taj Mahal, which confused the Indians.[46]

From the embassy in New Delhi, Galbraith emerged as a critic about the increasing American involvement in Vietnam. In November 1961, Galbraith visited South Vietnam, where he presented an unflattering picture of the regime of President Ngo Dinh Diem saying "we are now married to failure" and advised finding a new South Vietnamese leader, saying "nothing succeeds like successors".[47] In May 1962, Galbraith cabled Kennedy, stating that according to the most recent statements made by the Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, President Diem of South Vietnam had about 170,000 men under arms at present, while claiming that his country was in major danger from 20,000 lightly armed Viet Cong guerrillas.[48] Galbraith proceeded to do a statistical comparison, under he which calculated that in proportional terms, Diem had an army that was approximately the ratio to the population that was equivalent to that of the U.S Army to the American people after the Civil War, while the Viet Cong had a ratio equivalent to that of the Sioux vs the American people, leading Galbraith to sarcastically ask why Diem needed more American support.[48] He concluded his cable to Kennedy: "Incidentally, who is the man in your administration who decides what countries are strategic? I would like to have his name and address and ask him what is so important about this real estate in the Space Age".[48]

In January 1963, when the Polish Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki visited New Delhi, Galbraith met with him to declare to him his "despair" about Kennedy's Vietnam policies and to ask that Poland as one of the three members of the ICC try help find a diplomatic solution to the Vietnam war.[49] Galbraith told Rapacki that he favored an agreement to neutralize the two Vietnams similar to the neutralization agreement signed for Laos in 1962.[50] On February 5, 1963 Przemysław Ogrodziński, the Polish ambassador in New Delhi, was ordered by his superiors in Warsaw: "As far as the Vietnam matter, we are discussing it. It was received with interest. Deliberations will continue. As for now, we suggest inviting Galbraith to lunch and sounding [him] out, without committing ourselves, in order for him to see that we are looking into this matter".[51]

Although Galbraith had acted on his own in approaching Rapacki, he had some support from Kennedy, who told him "to pursue the subject immediately."[52] This was the origin of the "Maneli affair", named after Mieczysław Maneli, the Polish Commissioner to the ICC who, together with Ramchundur Goburdhun, the Indian Commissioner on the ICC, approached leaders in both North and South Vietnam with a proposal to make both Vietnams neutral in the Cold War.[52]

On April 1, 1963, Galbraith flew to Washington to discuss the peace proposal with Kennedy, where he was told by the president "to be prepared to seize upon any favorable moment to reduce our commitment [in Vietnam]", though it "might yet be some time away."[52] In September 1963, Maneli met with Ngô Đình Nhu, the younger brother and right-hand man of President Diem, to discuss neutralization, a meeting that was leaked to the right-wing American columnist Joseph Alsop.[52] At that point Kennedy lost interest in the "Maneli affair", instead deciding to back an alternative option he had been considering since August: a coup against the Ngo brothers.[52]

While in India, he helped establish one of the first computer science departments, at the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh.[38] (Even after leaving office, Galbraith remained a friend and supporter of India.) Because of his recommendation, First Lady of the United States Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy undertook her 1962 diplomatic missions in India and Pakistan.

Johnson administration edit

After leaving the American embassy in India, Galbraith continued to advise Johnson, now president, against escalating American involvement in Vietnam. In 1965, he advised Johnson that he should "instruct officials and spokesmen to stop saying the future of mankind, the United States, and human liberty is being decided in Vietnam. It isn't; this merely builds up a difficult problem out of all proportion. It is also terrible politics".[53] During the 1966 Buddhist crisis in South Vietnam, Galbraith wrote Johnson a letter on April 3 saying he now had "an opportunity only the God-fearing deserve and only the extremely lucky get", saying that if the government of Air Marshal Nguyễn Cao Kỳ should fall, Johnson should use the occasion to pull all Americans out of Vietnam.[54]

On June 16, 1966, Galbraith offered to write Johnson a speech that would set out an orderly withdrawal of American forces over the next year.[54] Galbraith advised Johnson the beginning of the "Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution" in China represented an opportunity for a diplomatic settlement of the Vietnam war, predicting that Mao Zedong would lose interest in Vietnam now that he had launched his Cultural Revolution.[55] The National Security Adviser, W.W. Rostow, wrote the reply to Galbraith that was signed by Johnson, curtly declaring: "I have never doubted your talent for political craftsmanship, and I am sure you could devise a script that would appear to justify our taking an unjustifiable course in South Vietnam".[54] On June 28, 1966, Galbraith made his final attempt to change Johnson's mind, warning that the Vietnam War would ruin his presidency and that he should stop taking the advice of Rostow.[54] Galbraith stated that Johnson had the potential to be one of the greatest presidents if only he find a way out of Vietnam, and concluded: "The people who want to invest more and more in this war have nothing to lose. They will end up working for a foundation".[54]

In 1966, when he was no longer ambassador, he told the United States Senate that one of the main causes of the 1965 Kashmir war was American military aid to Pakistan.[56]

 
Galbraith and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy at the US Chancery, New Delhi

In early 1968, Galbraith endorsed Senator Eugene McCarthy, who ran against Johnson on an anti-war platform.[57] During the New Hampshire Democratic primary, Galbraith toured the Granite State, giving pro-McCarthy speeches in churches, union halls, campuses and house parties.[58] As McCarthy had the reputation of being strange and frivolous, Galbraith's support and campaigning for him was important, as McCarthy needed the endorsement of mainstream figures to give him credibility.[59] When the New Hampshire Democratic primary was held on March 12, 1968, Johnson defeated McCarthy by only about 300 votes, a humiliation for an incumbent president with a well funded campaign running against a senator widely considered to be too eccentric to be president, and who had only a fraction of the campaign money that Johnson had.[58][60] Through Johnson won the primary, the very narrow margin of his victory was widely considered to be a defeat. On the night of the primary, Galbraith celebrated the result at McCarthy campaign headquarters as if it were an outright victory.[58] The day after the New Hampshire primary, Galbraith was widely cheered by his students when he entered his lecture hall at Harvard.[58]

The results of the New Hampshire primary showed that Johnson was vulnerable. On March 16, 1968, Senator Robert F. Kennedy announced he was entering the presidential race. Kennedy asked Galbraith to withdraw his endorsement of McCarthy and to endorse him instead, a request that Galbraith refused.[61] The historian Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., who campaigned with Galbraith in New Hampshire for McCarthy, switched his support to Kennedy, on the grounds that Kennedy was a far more electable candidate than the eccentric McCarthy, a man most people found to be too silly to be president.[61] Schlesinger strongly urged Galbraith to support Kennedy, but Galbraith chose to continue to campaign for McCarthy, partly because McCarthy's liberalism was closer to his own politics, and partly out of a personal revulsion for Kennedy, who had only opportunistically entered the presidential race when it became clear that Johnson was not invincible.[62] Galbraith had been friends with John Kennedy, but his relations with Robert were more difficult, as Galbraith found Robert too rigid, utterly convinced that he was always right.[62] Galbraith later said that with Robert Kennedy "You were either for the cause or against it, with the Kennedys or a leper".[62]

After Kennedy was assassinated, McCarthy became so depressed that he almost dropped out of the election, and Galbraith visited several times to urge him to continue, through Galbraith later admitted "...I don't believe Eugene McCarthy's heart was ever wholly in the battle".[63] At the chaotic and violent Democratic National Convention in August 1968 in Chicago, Galbraith attended as the floor manager for the McCarthy campaign.[64] Amid what was later called a "police riot", as the Chicago police fought in the streets with anti-Vietnam war protesters, Galbraith held an impromptu speech outside the Hilton Hotel before a group of demonstrators, urging them to reject violence and to have patience, while assuring them that the American system was capable of reform and change.[65] Galbraith pointed to the armed Illinois National Guardsmen standing in the background and said that they, unlike the Chicago police, were not the enemy, as he maintained that most of the young men who joined the Illinois National Guard had only done so to avoid being drafted to fight in Vietnam.[66] After finishing his speech, a National Guard sergeant approached Galbraith, who froze up in fear as he believed he was about to be arrested. Instead the sergeant wanted to shake hands, saying: "Thank you, sir. That was the first nice thing anyone has said about us all week".[67]

At the convention, supporters of Johnson challenged Galbraith's right to serve as a delegate, and sought to expel him from the building.[67] Galbraith quarreled with Johnson supporters on the convention floor as he sought to add a peace plank to the Democratic platform, which Johnson saw as an insult to himself, and ordered the delegates to reject.[67] The Mayor of Chicago, Richard Daley, a Johnson supporter, had imposed such stringent security conditions that it was impossible to walk across the convention hall without jostling somebody else, which added to the tension of the convention as pro-war and anti-war Democrats fiercely argued about the platform, all of which was captured live on national television.[67] Adding to the tension were televisions on the convention floor that showed what was happening outside, as the Chicago police attacked and beat anti-war demonstrators.[67] On Daley's orders, the Chicago police searched Galbraith's room at the Hilton hotel, alleging that he was hiding anti-war protesters.[67] None were found.[67] After Vice President Hubert Humphrey won the Democratic nomination, Galbraith reluctantly endorsed Humphrey as preferable to the Republican candidate, Richard Nixon.[68]

Later life and recognition edit

In autumn 1972, Galbraith was an adviser and assistant to Nixon's rival candidate, Senator George McGovern, in the election campaign for the American presidency. During this time (September 1972) he travelled to China in his role as president of the American Economic Association (AEA) at the invitation of Mao Zedong's communist government, together with fellow economists Wassily Leontief and James Tobin. In 1973, Galbraith published an account of his experiences in A China Passage, writing that there was "no serious doubt that China is devising a highly effective economic system," "[d]issidents are brought firmly into line in China, but, one suspects, with great politeness," and "Greater Shanghai ... has a better medical service than New York,". He considered it not implausible that Chinese industrial and agricultural output was expanding annually at a rate of 10 to 11%.[69]

In 1972 he served as president of the American Economic Association.[70] The Journal of Post Keynesian Economics benefited from Galbraith's support and he served as the chairman of its board from its beginning.[7]

During the shooting of The World at War, a British television documentary series (1973–74), Galbraith described his experiences in the Roosevelt war administration. Among other things, he spoke about the initial confusion during the first meeting of the major departmental leaders about kapok and its use.[relevant?] Galbraith also talked about rationing and especially about trickery during fuel allocation.

In December 1977, he met the Palauan senator Roman Tmetuchl and eventually became an unpaid adviser to the Palau Political Status Commission. He advocated for minimal financial requirement and infrastructure projects. In 1979 he addressed Palau's legislature and participated in a seminar for the delegates to the Palau Constitutional Convention. He became the first person to earn honorary citizenship of Palau.[71]

In 1984, he visited the USSR, writing that the Soviet economy had made "great material progress" as, "in contrast to Western industrial economy," the USSR "makes full use of its manpower."[72][73]

In 1985, the American Humanist Association named him the Humanist of the Year. The Association for Asian Studies (AAS) conferred its 1987 Award for Distinguished Contributions to Asian Studies.[74]

External video
  Memorial service for Galbraith at Memorial Church in Harvard Yard, Cambridge, May 31, 2006, C-SPAN

In 1997 he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada.[75] In 2000 he was awarded the US Presidential Medal of Freedom. He also was awarded an honorary doctorate from Memorial University of Newfoundland at the fall convocation of 1999,[76] another contribution to the impressive collection of approximately fifty academic honorary degrees bestowed upon Galbraith. In 2000, he was awarded the Leontief Prize for his outstanding contribution to economic theory by the Global Development and Environment Institute. The library in his hometown of Dutton, Ontario was renamed the John Kenneth Galbraith Reference Library in honor of his attachment to the library and his contributions to the new building.

On April 29, 2006, Galbraith died in Cambridge, Massachusetts, of natural causes at the age of 97, after a two-week stay in a hospital. He is interred at Indian Hill Cemetery in Middletown, Connecticut.

Family edit

On September 17, 1937, Galbraith married Catherine Merriam Atwater, whom he met while she was a Radcliffe graduate student. Their marriage lasted for 68 years. The Galbraiths resided in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and had a summer home in Townshend, VT. They had four sons: J. Alan Galbraith is a partner in the Washington, DC, law firm Williams & Connolly; Douglas Galbraith died in childhood of leukemia; Peter W. Galbraith has been an American diplomat who served as Ambassador to Croatia and is a commentator on American foreign policy, particularly in the Balkans and the Middle East; James K. Galbraith is a progressive economist at the University of Texas at Austin Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs. The Galbraiths also had ten grandchildren.[77]

A memorial plaque stands adjoining a stone inukshuk overlooking the Galbraith family farm on the Thompson (Hogg) Line just east of Willey Road, just north of the one room school he attended. The family home—a large white farm house—still stands, as do many of the original farm buildings.

Writings edit

Even before becoming a president of the American Economic Association, Galbraith was considered as an iconoclast by many economists. This is partly because he rejected the technical analysis and mathematical modelling of neoclassical economics as being divorced from reality. Following Thorstein Veblen, he believed that economic activity could not be distilled into inviolable laws, but rather was a complex product of the cultural and political milieu in which it occurs. In particular, he posited that important factors, such as the separation between corporate ownership and management, oligopoly, and the influence of government and military spending had been largely neglected by most economists because they are not amenable to axiomatic descriptions. In this sense, he worked as much in political economy as in classical economics.

His work included several best selling books throughout the fifties and sixties. His major contribution to the field of economics is the so-called American capitalism trilogy: The Affluent Society (1958), The New Industrial State (1967), and Economics and the Public Purpose (1973). Written in a clear and concise style, they were comprehensible to lay readers, not just economists.

After his retirement from Harvard as the Paul M. Warburg Professor of Economics, Emeritus,[3] he remained in the public spotlight by continuing to write 21 new books, as well as completing a script in 1977 for a major series on economics for PBS and BBC television—The Age of Uncertainty, broadcast in 38 countries.[3]

In addition to his books, he wrote hundreds of essays and a number of novels. Among his novels, A Tenured Professor achieved particular critical acclaim. Galbraith wrote book reviews, e.g., of The Report from Iron Mountain on the Possibility and Desirability of Peace, a 1967 political satire, under the pen name of Herschel McLandress, a name of a fictional Scottish mentor featured in the Tenured Professor.[78][79] He also used the pseudonym, Mark Épernay, when he published The McLandress Dimension in 1963.[80]

Economics books edit

Galbraith was an important figure in 20th-century institutional economics, and provided an exemplary institutionalist perspective on economic power.[81] Among his numerous writings, Galbraith cherished The New Industrial State and The Affluent Society as his two best.[82] As for the later works, economist and Galbraith friend Mike Sharpe visited him in 2004, on which occasion Galbraith gave Sharpe a copy of what would be Galbraith's last book, The Economics of Innocent Fraud. Galbraith confided in Sharpe that "this is my best book", an assertion Galbraith delivered "a little mischievously."[83]

After the beginning of the Great Recession of 2008, Galbraith's The Great Crash, 1929 (1955) and other books containing warnings about the dangers of an unrestrained speculative mood without proper government oversight found an attentive readership again. In 2010, the Library of America published a new edition of Galbraith's major works, edited by his son, James K. Galbraith: The Affluent Society & Other Writings, 1952–1967: American Capitalism, The Great Crash, 1929, The Affluent Society, and The New Industrial State.[84] On this occasion, Bill Moyers interviewed James K. Galbraith about his father, his works, and his legacy.[85]

American economy edit

In American Capitalism: The Concept of Countervailing Power, published in 1952, Galbraith concluded that the American economy was managed by a triumvirate of big business, big labor, and an activist government. Galbraith defined the actions of the industry lobby groups and unions as countervailing power. He contrasted this arrangement with the period prior to the previous Depression, when big business had relatively free rein over the economy.

His 1955 bestseller The Great Crash, 1929 describes the Wall Street meltdown of stock prices and how markets progressively become decoupled from reality in a speculative boom. The book is also a platform for Galbraith's humor and keen insights into human behavior when wealth is threatened. It has never been out of print.

In The Affluent Society (1958), which became a bestseller, Galbraith outlined his view that to become successful, post–World War II America should make large investments in items such as highways and education, using funds from general taxation.

Galbraith also critiqued the assumption that continually increasing material production is a sign of economic and societal health. Because of this Galbraith is sometimes considered one of the first post-materialists. In this book, he popularized the old phrase "conventional wisdom".[86] Galbraith worked on the book while in Switzerland and had originally titled it Why The Poor Are Poor, but changed it to The Affluent Society at his wife's suggestion.[38] The Affluent Society contributed (likely to a significant degree, given that Galbraith had the ear of President Kennedy[87]) to the "war on poverty", the government spending policy introduced by the administrations of Kennedy and Johnson.

New industrial state edit

In 1966, Galbraith was invited by the BBC to present the Reith Lectures,[88] a series of radio broadcasts, which he titled The New Industrial State.[89] Across six broadcasts, he explored the economics of production and the effect large corporations could have over the state.

In the print edition of The New Industrial State (1967), Galbraith expanded his analysis of the role of power in economic life, arguing that very few industries in the United States fit the model of perfect competition. A central concept of the book is the revised sequence. The 'conventional wisdom' in economic thought portrays economic life as a set of competitive markets governed, ultimately, by the decisions of sovereign consumers. In this original sequence, the control of the production process flows from consumers of commodities to the organizations that produce those commodities. In the revised sequence, this flow is reversed and businesses exercise control over consumers by advertising and related salesmanship activities.

The revised sequence concept applies only to the industrial system—that is, the manufacturing core of the economy in which each industry contains only a handful of very powerful corporations. It does not apply to the market system in the Galbraithian dual economy. In the market system, composed of the vast majority of business organizations, price competition remains the dominant form of social control. In the industrial system, however, composed of the 1,000 or so large corporations, competitive price theory obscures the relation to the price system of these large and powerful corporations. In Galbraith's view, the principal function of market relations in this industrial system is, not to constrain the power of the corporate behemoths, but to serve as an instrument for the implementation of their power. Moreover, the power of these corporations extends into commercial culture and politics, allowing them to exercise considerable influence upon popular social attitudes and value judgments. That this power is exercised in the shortsighted interest of expanding commodity production and the status of the few is both inconsistent with democracy and a barrier to achieving the quality of life that the new industrial state with its affluence could provide.

The New Industrial State not only provided Galbraith with another best-selling book, it also extended once again, the currency of institutionalist economic thought. The book also filled a very pressing need in the late 1960s. The conventional theory of monopoly power in economic life maintains that the monopolist will attempt to restrict supply in order to maintain price above its competitive level. The social cost of this monopoly power is a decrease in both allocative efficiency and the equity of income distribution. This conventional economic analysis of the role of monopoly power did not adequately address popular concern about the large corporation in the late 1960s. The growing concern focused on the role of the corporation in politics, the damage done to the natural environment by an unmitigated commitment to economic growth, and the perversion of advertising and other pecuniary aspects of culture. The New Industrial State gave a plausible explanation of the power structure involved in generating these problems and found a very receptive audience among the rising American counterculture and political activists.

A third related work 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.

Financial bubbles edit

In A Short History of Financial Euphoria (1990), he traces speculative bubbles through several centuries, and argues that they are inherent in the free market system because of "mass psychology" and the "vested interest in error that accompanies speculative euphoria." Also, financial memory is "notoriously short": what currently seems to be a "new financial instrument" is inevitably nothing of the sort. Galbraith cautions: "The world of finance hails the invention of the wheel over and over again, often in a slightly more unstable version." Crucial to his analysis is the assertion that the common factor in boom-and-bust is the creation of debt to finance speculation, which "becomes dangerously out of scale in relation to the underlying means of payment."

Legacy edit

Galbraith's main ideas focused around the influence of the market power of large corporations.[7] He believed that this market power weakened the widely accepted principle of consumer sovereignty, allowing corporations to be price makers, rather than price takers,[90] allowing corporations with the strongest market power to increase the production of their goods beyond an efficient amount. He further believed that market power played a major role in inflation.[7] He argued that corporations and trade unions could only increase prices to the extent that their market power allowed. He argued that in situations of excessive market power, price controls effectively controlled inflation, but cautioned against using them in markets that were basically efficient such as agricultural goods and housing.[91] He noted that price controls were much easier to enforce in industries with relatively few buyers and sellers.[91]: 244  Galbraith's view of market power was not entirely negative; he also noted that the power of US firms played a part in the success of the US economy.

In The Affluent Society Galbraith asserts that classical economic theory was true for the eras before the present, which were times of "poverty"; now, however, we have moved from an age of poverty to an age of "affluence", and for such an age, a completely new economic theory is needed.

Galbraith's main argument is that as society becomes relatively more affluent, private business must create consumer demand through advertising, and while this generates artificial affluence through the production of commercial goods and services, the public sector becomes neglected. He points out that while many Americans were able to purchase luxury items, their parks were polluted and their children attended poorly maintained schools. He argues that markets alone will under-provide (or fail to provide at all) for many public goods, whereas private goods are typically "over-provided" due to the process of advertising creating an artificial demand above the individual's basic needs. This emphasis on the power of advertising and consequent over-consumption may have anticipated the drop in savings rates in the US and elsewhere in the developing world.[7]

Galbraith proposed curbing the consumption of certain products through greater use of pigovian taxes and land value taxes,[92] arguing that this could be more efficient than other forms of taxation, such as labor taxes. Galbraith's major proposal was a program he called "investment in men"—a large-scale, publicly funded education program aimed at empowering ordinary citizens.

An International Symposium to honor John Kenneth Galbraith, sponsored by the l'Université du Littoral Côte d'Opale, Dunkerque and the Institut de Gestion Sociale, Paris, France, was held in September 2004 in Paris.[93]

A special issue Commemorating John Kenneth Galbraith's Centenary of the Review of Political Economy was dedicated in 2008 to Galbraith's contribution to economics.[94]

Three days before his death, Galbraith urged his son, economist James K. Galbraith, to "write a short book on corporate predation"; the younger Galbraith completed The Predator State in 2008.

Criticism of Galbraith's work edit

Galbraith's work in general, and The Affluent Society in particular, have drawn sharp criticism from laissez-faire supporters since the time of their publications. Neoliberal and Nobel Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman in "Friedman on Galbraith, and on curing the British disease" views Galbraith as a 20th-century version of the early-19th-century Tory radical of Great Britain. He asserts that Galbraith believes in the superiority of aristocracy and in its paternalistic authority, that consumers should not be allowed choice, and that all should be determined by those with "higher minds", commenting: "Many reformers—Galbraith is not alone in this—have as their basic objection to a free market that it frustrates them in achieving their reforms, because it enables people to have what they want, not what the reformers want. Hence every reformer has a strong tendency to be averse to a free market."[95]

Nobel Prize-winning economist Robert Solow, in a review of The New Industrial State, points at Galbraith's lack of empiricism and selectiveness in his use of evidence. He points out that "It may be unjust and pointless to consider the degree of literal truth of each of the assertions that make up this argument. One would hardly discuss Gulliver's Travels by debating whether there really are any little people, or criticize the Grande Jatte because objects aren't made up of tiny dots. Nevertheless, it may help to judge the truth of Galbraith's."[96]

Richard Parker, in his biography, John Kenneth Galbraith: His Life, His Economics, His Politics, characterizes Galbraith as a more complex thinker. Galbraith's primary purpose in Capitalism: The Concept of Countervailing Power (1952) was, ironically, to show that big business was now necessary to the American economy to maintain the technological progress that drives economic growth. Galbraith knew that the "countervailing power", which included government regulation and collective bargaining, was necessary to balanced and efficient markets. In The New Industrial State (1967), Galbraith argued that the dominant American corporations had created a technostructure that closely controlled both consumer demand and market growth through advertising and marketing. While Galbraith defended government intervention, Parker notes that he also believed that government and big business worked together to maintain stability.[97]

Paul Krugman downplayed Galbraith's stature as an academic economist in 1994. In Peddling Prosperity, he places Galbraith as one among many "policy entrepreneurs"—either economists, or think tank writers, left and right—who write solely for the public, as opposed to those who write for other academics, and who are, therefore, liable to make unwarranted diagnoses and offer over-simplistic answers to complex economic problems. Krugman asserts that Galbraith was never taken seriously by fellow academics, who instead viewed him as more of a "media personality". For example, Krugman believes that Galbraith's work, The New Industrial State, is not considered to be "real economic theory", and that Economics in Perspective is "remarkably ill-informed".[98]

Thomas Sowell wrote in his 1995 book The Vision of the Anointed that Galbraith was a notable "teflon prophet" alongside American biologist Paul R. Ehrlich, and institutes like the Club of Rome and Worldwatch Institute; they were utterly certain in their predictions, yet completely disproven empirically, though their reputations remained perfectly undamaged. Sowell first noted that in The Affluent Society, Galbraith argued that discussions of income inequality in the United States appeared to be declining in urgency. However, Sowell contended that since 1958, the year Galbraith's book was written, preoccupation with income distribution had been at an all-time high. Next, Sowell criticized Galbraith's claims in The Affluent Society and The New Industrial State that large corporations are invincible to competition. Sowell refuted this claim by citing Toyota and Honda's takeover of the United States' automobile market at the expense of General Motors, the previously dominant and allegedly infallible car company. Sowell also pointed out the decline of Life magazine, the disappearances of W.T. Grant and Graflex, the folding of Pan American, the collapse of newspaper companies in cities all across the country, the near extinction of Chrysler, and overall, the displacement of almost half of the firms in 1980's Fortune 500 in the 1990 edition. Sowell's third point of refutation was against Galbraith's assertion in The New Industrial State that successful corporate management was immune to corporate shake-ups, Sowell penned that, in reality, heads were "rolling in corporate suites across the land". The fourth of Galbraith's claims that Sowell believed to not have stood up to the test of time is Galbraith's contemptuousness towards the idea of a lone entrepreneur starting up a new, powerful company; Sowell used multibillionaires Steve Jobs and Bill Gates as counterexamples.[99]

Memoirs edit

External video
  Discussion with Galbraith and biographer Richard Parker, May 9, 2002, C-SPAN
  Discussion with Parker on John Kenneth Galbraith: His Life, His Politics, His Economics, April 17, 2005, C-SPAN

The first edition of The Scotch was published in the UK under two alternative titles: as Made to Last and The Non-potable Scotch: A Memoir of the Clansmen in Canada.[100] It was illustrated by Samuel H. Bryant. Galbraith's account of his boyhood environment in Elgin County in southern Ontario was added in 1963. He considered it his finest piece of writing.[101]

Galbraith memoir, A Life in Our Times was published in 1981.[102] It contains discussion of his thoughts, his life, and his times. In 2004, the publication of an authorized biography, John Kenneth Galbraith: His Life, His Politics, His Economics[25] by a friend and fellow progressive economist Richard Parker renewed interest in Galbraith's life journey and legacy.

Honors edit

John Kenneth Galbraith was one of the few people to receive both the World War II Medal of Freedom and the Presidential Medal of Freedom; respectively in 1946 from President Truman and in 2000 from President Bill Clinton.[103] He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1952[104] and the American Philosophical Society in 1980.[105] He was a recipient of Lomonosov Gold Medal in 1993 for his contributions to science. He also was appointed to the Order of Canada in 1997[75] and, in 2001, awarded the Padma Vibhushan, India's second highest civilian award, for his contributions to strengthening ties between India and the United States.[106] The government of France made him a Commandeur de la Légion d'honneur.

In 2010, he became the first economist to have his works included in the Library of America series.[107]

Minor Planet (4089) Galbraith is named in his honour.

Honorary degrees edit

John Kenneth Galbraith received fifty Honorary Degrees from institutions around the world:

Honorary Degrees
Location Date School Degree
  New York 1958 Bard College Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[108]
  Ontario 1961 University of Toronto Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[109]
  India 1961 Annamalai University D. Litt.[110]
  Massachusetts October 6, 1963 Brandeis University Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[111]
  Ontario May 1965 University of Guelph Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[112]
  Saskatchewan May 20, 1965 University of Saskatchewan Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[113]
  Michigan 1966 University of Michigan Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[114]
  Massachusetts 1967 Boston College Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[115]
  New York 1967 Hobart and William Smith Colleges Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[116]
  Ontario 1967 Queen's University Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[117]
  Ontario May 31, 1968 University of Western Ontario Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[118]
  Massachusetts 1968 Tufts University Doctor of Humane Letters (DHL)[119]
  Michigan 1968 Albion College Doctor of Letters (D.Litt.)[120]
  Illinois 1970 Knox College [121][122]
  Michigan Fall 1971 Michigan State University Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[123][124][125]
  Ontario Spring 1976 York University Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[126]
  Minnesota 1977 Carleton College [127]
  New Jersey 1979 Rutgers University Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[128]
  Iowa 1983 Grinnell College Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[129][130]
  Ontario November 1984 McMaster University Doctor of Letters (D.Litt.)[131]
  Massachusetts June 1988 Harvard University Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)
  Massachusetts 1989 Smith College Doctor of Laws (LL.D.)[132]
  Poland 1992 Warsaw School of Economics Doctorate[133]
  United Kingdom June 28, 1999 London School of Economics Doctor of Science (D.Sc.)[134]
  Newfoundland and Labrador Fall 1999 Memorial University of Newfoundland Doctor of Letters (D.Litt.)[135]

Works edit

External video
  Presentation by Galbraith on The Culture of Contentment, October 27, 1992, C-SPAN
  Booknotes interview with Galbraith on A Journey Through Economic Time, November 13, 1994, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Galbriath on The Good Society, May 1, 1996, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Galbraith on Letters to Kennedy, May 26, 1998, C-SPAN
  Presentation by Galbraith on Name-Dropping: From FDR On, June 8, 1999, C-SPAN
  • Modern Competition and Business Policy (with Henry S. Dennison), 1938
  • National Resources Planning Board, The economic effects of the federal public works expenditures, 1933-1938 (1940) online
  • A Theory of Price Control, 1952
  • American Capitalism: The Concept of Countervailing Power, 1952
  • The Great Crash, 1929, 1954
  • Economics and the Art of Controversy, 1955
  • The Affluent Society, 1958 online
  • Journey to Poland and Yugoslavia, 1958
  • Perspectives on conservation, 1958
  • The Liberal Hour, 1960
  • Economic Development in Perspective, 1962
  • The Scotch, 1963
  • The McLandress Dimension (under the pseudonym Mark Épernay), 1963
  • Economic Development, 1964
  • The New Industrial Estate (BBC Reith Lectures),[88] 1966
  • The New Industrial State, 1967 online
  • Beginner's Guide to American Studies, 1967
  • How to get out of Vietnam, 1967
  • The Triumph (novel), 1968
  • Ambassador's Journal, 1969
  • How to control the military, 1969
  • Indian Painting (with Mohinder Singh Randhawa), 1969
  • Who needs democrats, and what it takes to be needed, 1970
  • The American Left and Some British Comparisons, 1971
  • Economics, Peace and Laughter, 1972
  • Power and the Useful Economist, 1973
  • Economics and the Public Purpose, 1973
  • A China Passage, 1973
  • John Kenneth Galbraith introduces India (Editor), 1974
  • Money: Whence It Came, Where It Went, 1975
  • Socialism in rich countries and poor, 1975
  • The Economic effects of the Federal public works expenditures, 1933-38 (with G. Johnson), 1975
  • The Age of Uncertainty (PBS and BBC 13 part television series), 1977
  • The Galbraith Reader, 1977
  • Almost Everyone's Guide to Economics (with Nicole Salinger), 1978
  • Annals of an Abiding Liberal, 1979
  • The Nature of Mass Poverty, 1979
  • A Life in Our Times, 1981 online
  • The Voice of the Poor, 1983
  • The Anatomy of Power, 1983
  • Essays from the Poor to the Rich (with Paul McCracken), 1983
  • Reaganomics: Meaning, Means and Ends, 1983
  • A View from the Stands, 1986
  • Economics in Perspective: A Critical History, 1987
    • A History of Economics: The Past as the Present, 1987 online
  • Capitalism, Communism and Coexistence (with Stanislav Menshikov), 1988
  • Unconventional Wisdom: Essays on Economics in Honour of John Kenneth Galbraith (Editor), 1989 online
  • A Tenured Professor, 1990
  • The Culture of Contentment, 1992 online
  • Recollections of the New Deal: When People Mattered (Editor), 1992
  • A Journey Through Economic Time, 1994
  • The World Economy Since the Wars: A Personal View, 1994 online
  • A Short History of Financial Euphoria, 1994
  • The Good Society: the humane agenda, 1996
  • Letters to Kennedy, 1998
  • The socially concerned today, 1998
  • Name-Dropping: From F.D.R. On, 1999
  • The Essential Galbraith, 2001
  • The Economics of Innocent Fraud, 2004

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pronounced /ɡælˈbrθ/ gal-BRAYTH.
  2. ^ Canada did not have its own citizenship at the time, but later the United States and Canada acknowledged that their citizens, who had taken out citizenship in the others' countries, were recognized as having also retained their original citizenship, and Galbraith died as he had been born—a Canadian, although he had previously been amply honored as a Canadian as well as an American.[citation needed]

References edit

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  2. ^ Davidson, Paul (2005). "Galbraith and the Post Keynesians". Journal of Post Keynesian Economics. 28 (1): 103–13. JSTOR 4225383.
  3. ^ a b c Marglin, Stephen A.; Parker, Richard; Sen, Amartya; Friedman, Benjamin M. (February 7, 2008). "John Kenneth Galbraith". Harvard Gazette. Retrieved July 2, 2013.
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  11. ^ Galbraith (1981) ch. 6.
  12. ^ Galbraith, Name-Dropping: From F.D.R. On (1999) pp 14–15.
  13. ^ Galbraith, A Life in Our Times, pp. 90, 93.
  14. ^ He wrote National Resources Planning Board, The economic effects of the federal public works expenditures, 1933-1938 (1940) online
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  40. ^ Parker 2005, p. 354.
  41. ^ Parker 2005, p. 355-356.
  42. ^ Parker 2005, p. 356.
  43. ^ Parker 2005, p. 356-357.
  44. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 132-133.
  45. ^ a b c Langguth 2000, p. 133.
  46. ^ Parker 2005, p. 359.
  47. ^ Langguth 2000, p. 157.
  48. ^ a b c Langguth 2000, p. 172.
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  59. ^ Parker 2005, p. 454.
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Works cited edit

  • Galbraith, John Kenneth (1981). A Life in Our Times: Memoirs. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0345303233.
  • Gnoinska, Margaret (March 2005). "Poland and Vietnam, 1963: New Evidence on Secret Communist Diplomacy and the "Maneli Affair"". Cold War International History Project Working Paper. 45: 2–83.
  • Karnow, Stanley (1983). Vietnam: A History. New York: Viking. ISBN 0670746045.
  • Langguth, A.J. (2000). Our Vietnam: The War 1954-1975. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0743212444.
  • Parker, Richard (2005). John Kenneth Galbraith: His Life, His Politics, His Economics. New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux. ISBN 978-0226646770.

Obituaries edit

  • Feeney, Mark (April 30, 2006). "John Kenneth Galbraith, writer, economist, dies". The Boston Globe.
  • Noble, Holcomb B.; Martin, Douglas (April 30, 2006). "John Kenneth Galbraith, 97, Dies; Economist Held a Mirror to Society". The New York Times. Retrieved May 6, 2010.
  • Barnes, Bart (May 1, 2006). "John Kenneth Galbraith; Popularized Modern Economics". The Washington Post. Retrieved May 6, 2010.
  • "Famed economist John Kenneth Galbraith dies at 97". USA Today. April 30, 2006. Retrieved July 11, 2013.
  • "John Kenneth Galbraith, Longtime Economics Professor, Dies at 97". Harvard Crimson. April 30, 2006. Retrieved July 3, 2013.
  • Gewertz, Ken (May 4, 2006). . Harvard University Gazette. Archived from the original on February 8, 2011. Retrieved July 11, 2013.
  • David R. Henderson (December 1, 2006). "John Kenneth Galbraith: A Criticism and an Appreciation". Foundation for Economic Education. Wikidata Q114796509.
  • Hodgson, Godfrey (May 1, 2006). . The Independent. Archived from the original on October 11, 2010. Retrieved July 11, 2013.
  • "Obituary: John Kenneth Galbraith". BBC News. April 30, 2006. Retrieved July 11, 2013.

Further reading edit

  • Hession, Charles H (1972). John Kenneth Galbraith & his critics. New York: New American Library. LCCN 78176428.
  • Keaney, Michael, ed. (2001). Economist with a public purpose: essays in honour of John Kenneth Galbraith. Routledge frontiers of political economy. London ; New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-21292-2.
  • Laperche, Blandine; Uzunidis, Dimitri, eds. (2005). John Kenneth Galbraith and the future of economics. Basingstoke [England] ; New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-4039-9616-9. (Papers from the International Symposium Honoring John Kenneth Galbraith Held in Paris in September 2004)
  • Reisman, David A. (1980). Galbraith and market capitalism. New York: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-7380-2.
  • Sobel, Robert (1980). The worldly economists. New York: Free Press. ISBN 978-0-02-929780-3.
  • Stone, Irving (1970). There was light: Autobiography of a university: Berkeley, 1868–1968 (1st ed.). Garden City, N.Y: Doubleday. LCCN 77078738.
  • Thacker, Innes (1980), Ideological Control and the Depoliticisation of Language, in Bold, Christine (ed.), Cencrastus No. 2, Spring 1980, pp. 30 – 33, ISSN 0264-0856
  • Waligorski, Conrad (2006). John Kenneth Galbraith: the economist as political theorist. 20th century political thinkers. Lanham, Md: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-3148-2.

Primary sources edit

  • Galbraith, John Kenneth (2001). Williams, Andrea D. (ed.). The essential Galbraith. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-618-11963-9.
  • Galbraith, John Kenneth (2017). Holt, Richard P. F. (ed.). The selected letters of John Kenneth Galbraith. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107019881.
  • Galbraith, John Kenneth (2004). Stanfield, J. Ron; Stanfield, Jacqueline Bloom (eds.). Interviews with John Kenneth Galbraith. Conversations with public intellectuals series. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi. ISBN 978-1-57806-610-0.

External links edit

john, kenneth, galbraith, other, people, named, john, galbraith, john, galbraith, disambiguation, october, 1908, april, 2006, also, known, galbraith, canadian, american, economist, diplomat, public, official, intellectual, books, economic, topics, were, bestse. For other people named John Galbraith see John Galbraith disambiguation John Kenneth Galbraith a OC October 15 1908 April 29 2006 also known as Ken Galbraith was a Canadian American economist diplomat public official and intellectual His books on economic topics were bestsellers from the 1950s through the 2000s As an economist he leaned toward post Keynesian economics from an institutionalist perspective 1 2 John Kenneth GalbraithOCGalbraith in 19627th United States Ambassador to IndiaIn office April 18 1961 July 12 1963PresidentJohn F KennedyPreceded byEllsworth BunkerSucceeded byChester BowlesPersonal detailsBorn 1908 10 15 October 15 1908Iona Station Ontario CanadaDiedApril 29 2006 2006 04 29 aged 97 Cambridge Massachusetts U S SpouseCatherine Merriam Atwater m 1937 wbr Children4 including Peter and JamesAlma materOntario Agricultural College BSAg University of California Berkeley MA PhD Academic careerInstitutionHarvard UniversityPrinceton UniversityUniversity of California BerkeleyInfluencesThorstein Veblen Adam Smith Karl Marx John Maynard Keynes Michal Kalecki Gardiner Means Adolf A BerleContributionsCountervailing power technostructure conventional wisdomAwardsLomonosov Gold Medal 1993 Officer of the Order of Canada 1997 Presidential Medal of Freedom 2000 Galbraith was a long time Harvard faculty member and stayed with Harvard University for half a century as a professor of economics 3 He was a prolific author and wrote four dozen books including several novels and published more than a thousand articles and essays on various subjects Among his works was a trilogy on economics American Capitalism 1952 The Affluent Society 1958 and The New Industrial State 1967 Some of his work has been criticized by economists Milton Friedman Paul Krugman Robert Solow and Thomas Sowell Galbraith was active in Democratic Party politics serving in the administrations of Franklin D Roosevelt Harry S Truman John F Kennedy and Lyndon B Johnson He served as United States Ambassador to India under the Kennedy administration His political activism literary output and outspokenness brought him wide fame during his lifetime 4 5 Galbraith was one of the few to receive both the World War II Medal of Freedom 1946 and the Presidential Medal of Freedom 2000 for his public service and contributions to science Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life 1 2 World War II 1 3 Postwar 1 4 Kennedy administration 1 5 Johnson administration 1 6 Later life and recognition 1 7 Family 2 Writings 2 1 Economics books 2 1 1 American economy 2 1 2 New industrial state 2 1 3 Financial bubbles 2 2 Legacy 2 3 Criticism of Galbraith s work 2 4 Memoirs 3 Honors 3 1 Honorary degrees 4 Works 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Works cited 7 1 1 Obituaries 8 Further reading 8 1 Primary sources 9 External linksLife editEarly life edit Galbraith was born on October 15 1908 to Canadians of Scottish descent Sarah Catherine Kendall and Archibald Archie Galbraith in Iona Station Ontario Canada and was raised in Dunwich Township Ontario 6 He had three siblings Alice Catherine and Archibald William Bill By the time he was a teenager he had adopted the name Ken and later disliked being called John 7 Galbraith grew to be a very tall man attaining a height of 6 feet 9 inches 206 cm 8 His father was a farmer school teacher president of a cooperative insurance company and local official of the Liberal Party His mother a homemaker and a community activist died when he was fourteen years old 7 The family farm was located on Thomson Line Both of his parents were supporters of the United Farmers of Ontario in the 1920s His early years were spent at a one room school which is still standing on 9468 Willey Road in Iona Station 9 Later he went to Dutton High School and St Thomas High School In 1931 Galbraith graduated with a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture from the Ontario Agricultural College which was then an associate agricultural college of the University of Toronto He majored in animal husbandry He was awarded a Giannini Scholarship in Agricultural Economics receiving 60 per month 7 that allowed him to travel to Berkeley California where he received masters and Doctor of Philosophy degrees in agricultural economics from the University of California Berkeley Galbraith was taught economics by Professor George Martin Peterson and together they wrote an economics paper titled The Concept of Marginal Land in 1932 that was published in the American Journal of Agricultural Economics 10 After graduation in 1934 he started to work as an instructor at Harvard University Galbraith taught intermittently at Harvard in the period 1934 to 1939 5 From 1939 to 1940 he taught at Princeton University In 1937 he became a citizen of the United States and was no longer a British subject b In the same year he took a year long fellowship at the University of Cambridge England where he was influenced by John Maynard Keynes He then traveled in Europe for several months in 1938 attending an international economic conference and developing his ideas 11 He served for a few months in summer 1934 in the U S Department of Agriculture 12 As a Harvard teacher in 1938 he was given charge of a research project for the National Resources Planning Board 13 14 From 1943 until 1948 he served as an editor of Fortune magazine In 1949 he was appointed professor of economics at Harvard He also taught at the Harvard Extension School 15 World War II edit nbsp Photograph was taken between 1940 and 1946 I react pragmatically Where the market works I m for that Where the government is necessary I m for that I m deeply suspicious of somebody who says I m in favor of privatization or I m deeply in favor of public ownership I m in favor of whatever works in the particular case C SPAN November 13 1994 16 The United States went into WWII with an economy still not fully recovered from the Great Depression 17 Because wartime production needs mandated large budget deficits and an accommodating monetary policy inflation and a runaway wage price spiral were seen as likely 18 As a part of a team charged with keeping inflation from damaging the war effort Galbraith served as a deputy administrator of the Office of Price Administration OPA during World War II in 1941 1943 The OPA directed the process of stabilization of prices and rents 19 On May 11 1941 President Roosevelt created the Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply OPACS On August 28 1941 it became the Office of Price Administration OPA After the US entered the war in December 1941 OPA was tasked with rationing and price controls The Emergency Price Control Act passed on January 30 1942 legitimized the OPA as a separate federal agency It merged OPA with two other agencies Consumer Protection Division and Price Stabilization Division of the Advisory Commission to the Council of National Defense 20 The council was referred to as the National Defense Advisory Commission NDAC and was created on May 29 1940 21 NDAC emphasized voluntary and advisory methods in keeping prices low Leon Henderson the NDAC commissioner for price stabilization became the administrator of OPACS and of OPA in 1941 1942 He oversaw a mandatory and vigorous price regulation that started in May 1942 after OPA introduced the General Maximum Price Regulation GMPR It was much criticized by the business community In response OPA mobilized the public on behalf of the new guidelines and said that it reduced the options for those who were seeking higher rents or prices OPA had its own Enforcement Division which documented the increase of violations a quarter million in 1943 and more than 300 000 during the next year 21 Historians and economists differ over the assessment of the OPA activities which started with six people but then grew to 15 000 staffers 22 23 Some of them point to the fact that price increases were relatively lower than during the First World War and that the overall economy grew faster Steven Pressman for example wrote that when the controls were removed there was only a small increase in prices thereby demonstrating that inflationary pressures were actively managed and not just kept temporarily under control 24 Galbraith said in an interview that he considered his work at the OPA as his major life achievement since prices were relatively stable during WWII 23 The role of the OPA however as well as the whole legacy of the US government wartime economic stabilization measures from a long term perspective remains debated Richard Parker who earlier had written a well regarded biography of Galbraith had this to say about Galbraith s efforts during the war H e had first gone to work in the nation s capital in 1934 as a 25 year old fresh out of graduate school and just about to join the Harvard faculty as a young instructor He had returned to Washington in mid 1940 after Paris fell to the Germans initially to help ready the nation for war Eighteen months later after Pearl Harbor he was then appointed to oversee the wartime economy as price czar charged with preventing inflation and corrupt price gouging from devastating the economy as it swelled to produce the weapons and materiel needed to guarantee victory against fascism In this he and his colleagues at the Office of Price Administration had been stunningly successful guiding an economy that quadrupled in size in less than five years without fanning the inflation that had haunted World War I or leaving behind an unbalanced post war collapse of the kind that had done such grievous damage to Europe in the 1920s 25 Opposition to the OPA came from conservatives in Congress and the business community It undercut Galbraith and he was forced out in May 1943 accused of communistic tendencies 26 He was promptly hired by Henry Luce a conservative Republican and a dominant figure in American media as publisher of Time and Fortune magazines Galbraith worked for Luce for five years and expounded Keynesianism to the American business leadership 27 Luce allegedly said to President Kennedy I taught Galbraith how to write and have regretted it ever since 28 Galbraith saw his role as educating the entire nation on how the economy worked including the role of big corporations He was combining his writing with numerous speeches to business groups and local Democratic party meetings as well as frequently testifying before Congress 29 During the late stages of WWII in 1945 Galbraith was invited by Paul Nitze to serve as one of the Officers of the Strategic Bombing Survey initiated by the Office of Strategic Services It was designed to assess the results of the aerial bombardments of Nazi Germany 30 The survey found that German war production went up rather than down as German cities were being bombed Henderson 2006 wrote Galbraith had to fight hard to have his report published without it being rewritten to hide the essential points I defended it he wrote with a maximum of arrogance and a minimum of tact Those findings created a controversy with Nitze siding with others of the Officers managing the survey and with Pentagon officials who declared the opposite Later Galbraith described the willingness of public servants and institutions to bend the truth to please the Pentagon as the Pentagonania syndrome 31 Postwar edit In February 1946 Galbraith took a leave of absence from his magazine work for a senior position in the State Department as director of the Office of Economic Security Policy where he was nominally in charge of economic affairs regarding Germany Japan Austria and South Korea Distrusted by senior diplomats he was relegated to routine work with few opportunities to make policy 32 Galbraith favored detente with the Soviet Union along with Secretary of State James F Byrnes and General Lucius D Clay a military governor of the US Zone in Germany from 1947 to 1949 28 but they were out of step with the containment policy then being developed by George Kennan and favored by the majority of the US major policymakers After a disconcerting half year Galbraith resigned in September 1946 and went back to his magazine writing on economics issues 33 34 Later he immortalized his frustration with the ways of Foggy Bottom in a satirical novel The Triumph 1968 35 The postwar period also was memorable for Galbraith because of his work along with Eleanor Roosevelt and Hubert Humphrey to establish a progressive policy organization Americans for Democratic Action ADA in support of the cause of economic and social justice in 1947 In 1952 Galbraith s friends Arthur M Schlesinger Jr and George Ball recruited him to work as a speechwriter for the Democratic candidate Adlai Stevenson 36 The involvement of several intellectuals from the ADA in the Stevenson campaign attracted controversy as the Republican Senator Joseph McCarthy accused the ADA intellectuals as being tainted by well documented Red associations Galbraith later said one of his regrets was that McCarthy failed to condemn him as one of Stevenson s red advisers 37 Kennedy administration edit nbsp Galbraith first at left as US ambassador to India with President John F Kennedy Vice President Lyndon B Johnson and Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India 1961During his time as an adviser to President John F Kennedy Galbraith was appointed United States Ambassador to India from 1961 to 1963 His rapport with President Kennedy was such that he regularly bypassed the State Department and sent his diplomatic cables directly to the president 38 Galbraith disliked his superior the Secretary of State Dean Rusk writing to Kennedy that trying to communicate via Rusk was like trying to fornicate through a mattress 39 In India he became a confidant of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and extensively advised the Indian government on economic matters India was considered by Kennedy to be important not just in its own right but also because an Indian diplomat always served as the chief commissioner of the International Control Commission ICC and thus in this way Galbraith came to be involved in American policy towards Southeast Asia from his perch as an ambassador in New Delhi 40 In 1961 when Kennedy considered intervening in the civil war in Laos Galbraith strongly advised him not to warning him that the disaster of the Bay of Pigs invasion had been caused by Kennedy taking the advice offered by the hawkish Joint Chiefs of Staff who had assured him that the invasion could not fail and were now saying the same about the proposed intervention in Laos 41 Galbraith also noted that the ICC was also responsible for Laos as well as the two Vietnams and he had Nehru s word that the Indian diplomats on the ICC were willing to serve as honest brokers for a peace deal to make Laos neutral in the Cold War 42 In May 1961 the Indian ICC members had been able to broker a ceasefire in Laos and Kennedy decided to go for the neutralization option instead of war 43 During the talks in Geneva to discuss a solution to the Lao crisis the chief American delegate W Averell Harriman discovered the Chinese foreign minister Chen Yi was willing to meet him in private 44 However Rusk forbade Harriman to talk to Chen under any conditions fearful of Republican attacks against the Democrat Kennedy if the meetings should come out to the media causing Harriman to explode in rage that in World War Two Roosevelt had allowed him to meet whoever was necessary 45 Unable to change Rusk s mind Harriman appealed to Galbraith who in his turn appealed to Kennedy 45 Kennedy granted permission for Harriman to meet Chen provided that it was done under the strictest secrecy but by that time Chen had returned to Beijing 45 In May 1961 when Vice President Lyndon Johnson visited India Galbraith had the duty of escorting him around various sites in India and attempting to explain some of his Texas mannerisms such as his shouts of yee hah that he made when he saw the Taj Mahal which confused the Indians 46 From the embassy in New Delhi Galbraith emerged as a critic about the increasing American involvement in Vietnam In November 1961 Galbraith visited South Vietnam where he presented an unflattering picture of the regime of President Ngo Dinh Diem saying we are now married to failure and advised finding a new South Vietnamese leader saying nothing succeeds like successors 47 In May 1962 Galbraith cabled Kennedy stating that according to the most recent statements made by the Defense Secretary Robert McNamara President Diem of South Vietnam had about 170 000 men under arms at present while claiming that his country was in major danger from 20 000 lightly armed Viet Cong guerrillas 48 Galbraith proceeded to do a statistical comparison under he which calculated that in proportional terms Diem had an army that was approximately the ratio to the population that was equivalent to that of the U S Army to the American people after the Civil War while the Viet Cong had a ratio equivalent to that of the Sioux vs the American people leading Galbraith to sarcastically ask why Diem needed more American support 48 He concluded his cable to Kennedy Incidentally who is the man in your administration who decides what countries are strategic I would like to have his name and address and ask him what is so important about this real estate in the Space Age 48 In January 1963 when the Polish Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki visited New Delhi Galbraith met with him to declare to him his despair about Kennedy s Vietnam policies and to ask that Poland as one of the three members of the ICC try help find a diplomatic solution to the Vietnam war 49 Galbraith told Rapacki that he favored an agreement to neutralize the two Vietnams similar to the neutralization agreement signed for Laos in 1962 50 On February 5 1963 Przemyslaw Ogrodzinski the Polish ambassador in New Delhi was ordered by his superiors in Warsaw As far as the Vietnam matter we are discussing it It was received with interest Deliberations will continue As for now we suggest inviting Galbraith to lunch and sounding him out without committing ourselves in order for him to see that we are looking into this matter 51 Although Galbraith had acted on his own in approaching Rapacki he had some support from Kennedy who told him to pursue the subject immediately 52 This was the origin of the Maneli affair named after Mieczyslaw Maneli the Polish Commissioner to the ICC who together with Ramchundur Goburdhun the Indian Commissioner on the ICC approached leaders in both North and South Vietnam with a proposal to make both Vietnams neutral in the Cold War 52 On April 1 1963 Galbraith flew to Washington to discuss the peace proposal with Kennedy where he was told by the president to be prepared to seize upon any favorable moment to reduce our commitment in Vietnam though it might yet be some time away 52 In September 1963 Maneli met with Ngo Đinh Nhu the younger brother and right hand man of President Diem to discuss neutralization a meeting that was leaked to the right wing American columnist Joseph Alsop 52 At that point Kennedy lost interest in the Maneli affair instead deciding to back an alternative option he had been considering since August a coup against the Ngo brothers 52 While in India he helped establish one of the first computer science departments at the Indian Institute of Technology in Kanpur Uttar Pradesh 38 Even after leaving office Galbraith remained a friend and supporter of India Because of his recommendation First Lady of the United States Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy undertook her 1962 diplomatic missions in India and Pakistan Johnson administration edit After leaving the American embassy in India Galbraith continued to advise Johnson now president against escalating American involvement in Vietnam In 1965 he advised Johnson that he should instruct officials and spokesmen to stop saying the future of mankind the United States and human liberty is being decided in Vietnam It isn t this merely builds up a difficult problem out of all proportion It is also terrible politics 53 During the 1966 Buddhist crisis in South Vietnam Galbraith wrote Johnson a letter on April 3 saying he now had an opportunity only the God fearing deserve and only the extremely lucky get saying that if the government of Air Marshal Nguyễn Cao Kỳ should fall Johnson should use the occasion to pull all Americans out of Vietnam 54 On June 16 1966 Galbraith offered to write Johnson a speech that would set out an orderly withdrawal of American forces over the next year 54 Galbraith advised Johnson the beginning of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution in China represented an opportunity for a diplomatic settlement of the Vietnam war predicting that Mao Zedong would lose interest in Vietnam now that he had launched his Cultural Revolution 55 The National Security Adviser W W Rostow wrote the reply to Galbraith that was signed by Johnson curtly declaring I have never doubted your talent for political craftsmanship and I am sure you could devise a script that would appear to justify our taking an unjustifiable course in South Vietnam 54 On June 28 1966 Galbraith made his final attempt to change Johnson s mind warning that the Vietnam War would ruin his presidency and that he should stop taking the advice of Rostow 54 Galbraith stated that Johnson had the potential to be one of the greatest presidents if only he find a way out of Vietnam and concluded The people who want to invest more and more in this war have nothing to lose They will end up working for a foundation 54 In 1966 when he was no longer ambassador he told the United States Senate that one of the main causes of the 1965 Kashmir war was American military aid to Pakistan 56 nbsp Galbraith and First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy at the US Chancery New DelhiIn early 1968 Galbraith endorsed Senator Eugene McCarthy who ran against Johnson on an anti war platform 57 During the New Hampshire Democratic primary Galbraith toured the Granite State giving pro McCarthy speeches in churches union halls campuses and house parties 58 As McCarthy had the reputation of being strange and frivolous Galbraith s support and campaigning for him was important as McCarthy needed the endorsement of mainstream figures to give him credibility 59 When the New Hampshire Democratic primary was held on March 12 1968 Johnson defeated McCarthy by only about 300 votes a humiliation for an incumbent president with a well funded campaign running against a senator widely considered to be too eccentric to be president and who had only a fraction of the campaign money that Johnson had 58 60 Through Johnson won the primary the very narrow margin of his victory was widely considered to be a defeat On the night of the primary Galbraith celebrated the result at McCarthy campaign headquarters as if it were an outright victory 58 The day after the New Hampshire primary Galbraith was widely cheered by his students when he entered his lecture hall at Harvard 58 The results of the New Hampshire primary showed that Johnson was vulnerable On March 16 1968 Senator Robert F Kennedy announced he was entering the presidential race Kennedy asked Galbraith to withdraw his endorsement of McCarthy and to endorse him instead a request that Galbraith refused 61 The historian Arthur M Schlesinger Jr who campaigned with Galbraith in New Hampshire for McCarthy switched his support to Kennedy on the grounds that Kennedy was a far more electable candidate than the eccentric McCarthy a man most people found to be too silly to be president 61 Schlesinger strongly urged Galbraith to support Kennedy but Galbraith chose to continue to campaign for McCarthy partly because McCarthy s liberalism was closer to his own politics and partly out of a personal revulsion for Kennedy who had only opportunistically entered the presidential race when it became clear that Johnson was not invincible 62 Galbraith had been friends with John Kennedy but his relations with Robert were more difficult as Galbraith found Robert too rigid utterly convinced that he was always right 62 Galbraith later said that with Robert Kennedy You were either for the cause or against it with the Kennedys or a leper 62 After Kennedy was assassinated McCarthy became so depressed that he almost dropped out of the election and Galbraith visited several times to urge him to continue through Galbraith later admitted I don t believe Eugene McCarthy s heart was ever wholly in the battle 63 At the chaotic and violent Democratic National Convention in August 1968 in Chicago Galbraith attended as the floor manager for the McCarthy campaign 64 Amid what was later called a police riot as the Chicago police fought in the streets with anti Vietnam war protesters Galbraith held an impromptu speech outside the Hilton Hotel before a group of demonstrators urging them to reject violence and to have patience while assuring them that the American system was capable of reform and change 65 Galbraith pointed to the armed Illinois National Guardsmen standing in the background and said that they unlike the Chicago police were not the enemy as he maintained that most of the young men who joined the Illinois National Guard had only done so to avoid being drafted to fight in Vietnam 66 After finishing his speech a National Guard sergeant approached Galbraith who froze up in fear as he believed he was about to be arrested Instead the sergeant wanted to shake hands saying Thank you sir That was the first nice thing anyone has said about us all week 67 At the convention supporters of Johnson challenged Galbraith s right to serve as a delegate and sought to expel him from the building 67 Galbraith quarreled with Johnson supporters on the convention floor as he sought to add a peace plank to the Democratic platform which Johnson saw as an insult to himself and ordered the delegates to reject 67 The Mayor of Chicago Richard Daley a Johnson supporter had imposed such stringent security conditions that it was impossible to walk across the convention hall without jostling somebody else which added to the tension of the convention as pro war and anti war Democrats fiercely argued about the platform all of which was captured live on national television 67 Adding to the tension were televisions on the convention floor that showed what was happening outside as the Chicago police attacked and beat anti war demonstrators 67 On Daley s orders the Chicago police searched Galbraith s room at the Hilton hotel alleging that he was hiding anti war protesters 67 None were found 67 After Vice President Hubert Humphrey won the Democratic nomination Galbraith reluctantly endorsed Humphrey as preferable to the Republican candidate Richard Nixon 68 Later life and recognition edit In autumn 1972 Galbraith was an adviser and assistant to Nixon s rival candidate Senator George McGovern in the election campaign for the American presidency During this time September 1972 he travelled to China in his role as president of the American Economic Association AEA at the invitation of Mao Zedong s communist government together with fellow economists Wassily Leontief and James Tobin In 1973 Galbraith published an account of his experiences in A China Passage writing that there was no serious doubt that China is devising a highly effective economic system d issidents are brought firmly into line in China but one suspects with great politeness and Greater Shanghai has a better medical service than New York He considered it not implausible that Chinese industrial and agricultural output was expanding annually at a rate of 10 to 11 69 In 1972 he served as president of the American Economic Association 70 The Journal of Post Keynesian Economics benefited from Galbraith s support and he served as the chairman of its board from its beginning 7 During the shooting of The World at War a British television documentary series 1973 74 Galbraith described his experiences in the Roosevelt war administration Among other things he spoke about the initial confusion during the first meeting of the major departmental leaders about kapok and its use relevant Galbraith also talked about rationing and especially about trickery during fuel allocation In December 1977 he met the Palauan senator Roman Tmetuchl and eventually became an unpaid adviser to the Palau Political Status Commission He advocated for minimal financial requirement and infrastructure projects In 1979 he addressed Palau s legislature and participated in a seminar for the delegates to the Palau Constitutional Convention He became the first person to earn honorary citizenship of Palau 71 In 1984 he visited the USSR writing that the Soviet economy had made great material progress as in contrast to Western industrial economy the USSR makes full use of its manpower 72 73 In 1985 the American Humanist Association named him the Humanist of the Year The Association for Asian Studies AAS conferred its 1987 Award for Distinguished Contributions to Asian Studies 74 External video nbsp Memorial service for Galbraith at Memorial Church in Harvard Yard Cambridge May 31 2006 C SPANIn 1997 he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada 75 In 2000 he was awarded the US Presidential Medal of Freedom He also was awarded an honorary doctorate from Memorial University of Newfoundland at the fall convocation of 1999 76 another contribution to the impressive collection of approximately fifty academic honorary degrees bestowed upon Galbraith In 2000 he was awarded the Leontief Prize for his outstanding contribution to economic theory by the Global Development and Environment Institute The library in his hometown of Dutton Ontario was renamed the John Kenneth Galbraith Reference Library in honor of his attachment to the library and his contributions to the new building On April 29 2006 Galbraith died in Cambridge Massachusetts of natural causes at the age of 97 after a two week stay in a hospital He is interred at Indian Hill Cemetery in Middletown Connecticut Family edit On September 17 1937 Galbraith married Catherine Merriam Atwater whom he met while she was a Radcliffe graduate student Their marriage lasted for 68 years The Galbraiths resided in Cambridge Massachusetts and had a summer home in Townshend VT They had four sons J Alan Galbraith is a partner in the Washington DC law firm Williams amp Connolly Douglas Galbraith died in childhood of leukemia Peter W Galbraith has been an American diplomat who served as Ambassador to Croatia and is a commentator on American foreign policy particularly in the Balkans and the Middle East James K Galbraith is a progressive economist at the University of Texas at Austin Lyndon B Johnson School of Public Affairs The Galbraiths also had ten grandchildren 77 A memorial plaque stands adjoining a stone inukshuk overlooking the Galbraith family farm on the Thompson Hogg Line just east of Willey Road just north of the one room school he attended The family home a large white farm house still stands as do many of the original farm buildings Writings editEven before becoming a president of the American Economic Association Galbraith was considered as an iconoclast by many economists This is partly because he rejected the technical analysis and mathematical modelling of neoclassical economics as being divorced from reality Following Thorstein Veblen he believed that economic activity could not be distilled into inviolable laws but rather was a complex product of the cultural and political milieu in which it occurs In particular he posited that important factors such as the separation between corporate ownership and management oligopoly and the influence of government and military spending had been largely neglected by most economists because they are not amenable to axiomatic descriptions In this sense he worked as much in political economy as in classical economics His work included several best selling books throughout the fifties and sixties His major contribution to the field of economics is the so called American capitalism trilogy The Affluent Society 1958 The New Industrial State 1967 and Economics and the Public Purpose 1973 Written in a clear and concise style they were comprehensible to lay readers not just economists After his retirement from Harvard as the Paul M Warburg Professor of Economics Emeritus 3 he remained in the public spotlight by continuing to write 21 new books as well as completing a script in 1977 for a major series on economics for PBS and BBC television The Age of Uncertainty broadcast in 38 countries 3 In addition to his books he wrote hundreds of essays and a number of novels Among his novels A Tenured Professor achieved particular critical acclaim Galbraith wrote book reviews e g of The Report from Iron Mountain on the Possibility and Desirability of Peace a 1967 political satire under the pen name of Herschel McLandress a name of a fictional Scottish mentor featured in the Tenured Professor 78 79 He also used the pseudonym Mark Epernay when he published The McLandress Dimension in 1963 80 Economics books edit Galbraith was an important figure in 20th century institutional economics and provided an exemplary institutionalist perspective on economic power 81 Among his numerous writings Galbraith cherished The New Industrial State and The Affluent Society as his two best 82 As for the later works economist and Galbraith friend Mike Sharpe visited him in 2004 on which occasion Galbraith gave Sharpe a copy of what would be Galbraith s last book The Economics of Innocent Fraud Galbraith confided in Sharpe that this is my best book an assertion Galbraith delivered a little mischievously 83 After the beginning of the Great Recession of 2008 Galbraith s The Great Crash 1929 1955 and other books containing warnings about the dangers of an unrestrained speculative mood without proper government oversight found an attentive readership again In 2010 the Library of America published a new edition of Galbraith s major works edited by his son James K Galbraith The Affluent Society amp Other Writings 1952 1967 American Capitalism The Great Crash 1929 The Affluent Society and The New Industrial State 84 On this occasion Bill Moyers interviewed James K Galbraith about his father his works and his legacy 85 American economy edit In American Capitalism The Concept of Countervailing Power published in 1952 Galbraith concluded that the American economy was managed by a triumvirate of big business big labor and an activist government Galbraith defined the actions of the industry lobby groups and unions as countervailing power He contrasted this arrangement with the period prior to the previous Depression when big business had relatively free rein over the economy His 1955 bestseller The Great Crash 1929 describes the Wall Street meltdown of stock prices and how markets progressively become decoupled from reality in a speculative boom The book is also a platform for Galbraith s humor and keen insights into human behavior when wealth is threatened It has never been out of print In The Affluent Society 1958 which became a bestseller Galbraith outlined his view that to become successful post World War II America should make large investments in items such as highways and education using funds from general taxation Galbraith also critiqued the assumption that continually increasing material production is a sign of economic and societal health Because of this Galbraith is sometimes considered one of the first post materialists In this book he popularized the old phrase conventional wisdom 86 Galbraith worked on the book while in Switzerland and had originally titled it Why The Poor Are Poor but changed it to The Affluent Society at his wife s suggestion 38 The Affluent Society contributed likely to a significant degree given that Galbraith had the ear of President Kennedy 87 to the war on poverty the government spending policy introduced by the administrations of Kennedy and Johnson New industrial state edit In 1966 Galbraith was invited by the BBC to present the Reith Lectures 88 a series of radio broadcasts which he titled The New Industrial State 89 Across six broadcasts he explored the economics of production and the effect large corporations could have over the state In the print edition of The New Industrial State 1967 Galbraith expanded his analysis of the role of power in economic life arguing that very few industries in the United States fit the model of perfect competition A central concept of the book is the revised sequence The conventional wisdom in economic thought portrays economic life as a set of competitive markets governed ultimately by the decisions of sovereign consumers In this original sequence the control of the production process flows from consumers of commodities to the organizations that produce those commodities In the revised sequence this flow is reversed and businesses exercise control over consumers by advertising and related salesmanship activities The revised sequence concept applies only to the industrial system that is the manufacturing core of the economy in which each industry contains only a handful of very powerful corporations It does not apply to the market system in the Galbraithian dual economy In the market system composed of the vast majority of business organizations price competition remains the dominant form of social control In the industrial system however composed of the 1 000 or so large corporations competitive price theory obscures the relation to the price system of these large and powerful corporations In Galbraith s view the principal function of market relations in this industrial system is not to constrain the power of the corporate behemoths but to serve as an instrument for the implementation of their power Moreover the power of these corporations extends into commercial culture and politics allowing them to exercise considerable influence upon popular social attitudes and value judgments That this power is exercised in the shortsighted interest of expanding commodity production and the status of the few is both inconsistent with democracy and a barrier to achieving the quality of life that the new industrial state with its affluence could provide The New Industrial State not only provided Galbraith with another best selling book it also extended once again the currency of institutionalist economic thought The book also filled a very pressing need in the late 1960s The conventional theory of monopoly power in economic life maintains that the monopolist will attempt to restrict supply in order to maintain price above its competitive level The social cost of this monopoly power is a decrease in both allocative efficiency and the equity of income distribution This conventional economic analysis of the role of monopoly power did not adequately address popular concern about the large corporation in the late 1960s The growing concern focused on the role of the corporation in politics the damage done to the natural environment by an unmitigated commitment to economic growth and the perversion of advertising and other pecuniary aspects of culture The New Industrial State gave a plausible explanation of the power structure involved in generating these problems and found a very receptive audience among the rising American counterculture and political activists A third related work 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 Financial bubbles edit In A Short History of Financial Euphoria 1990 he traces speculative bubbles through several centuries and argues that they are inherent in the free market system because of mass psychology and the vested interest in error that accompanies speculative euphoria Also financial memory is notoriously short what currently seems to be a new financial instrument is inevitably nothing of the sort Galbraith cautions The world of finance hails the invention of the wheel over and over again often in a slightly more unstable version Crucial to his analysis is the assertion that the common factor in boom and bust is the creation of debt to finance speculation which becomes dangerously out of scale in relation to the underlying means of payment Legacy edit Galbraith s main ideas focused around the influence of the market power of large corporations 7 He believed that this market power weakened the widely accepted principle of consumer sovereignty allowing corporations to be price makers rather than price takers 90 allowing corporations with the strongest market power to increase the production of their goods beyond an efficient amount He further believed that market power played a major role in inflation 7 He argued that corporations and trade unions could only increase prices to the extent that their market power allowed He argued that in situations of excessive market power price controls effectively controlled inflation but cautioned against using them in markets that were basically efficient such as agricultural goods and housing 91 He noted that price controls were much easier to enforce in industries with relatively few buyers and sellers 91 244 Galbraith s view of market power was not entirely negative he also noted that the power of US firms played a part in the success of the US economy In The Affluent Society Galbraith asserts that classical economic theory was true for the eras before the present which were times of poverty now however we have moved from an age of poverty to an age of affluence and for such an age a completely new economic theory is needed Galbraith s main argument is that as society becomes relatively more affluent private business must create consumer demand through advertising and while this generates artificial affluence through the production of commercial goods and services the public sector becomes neglected He points out that while many Americans were able to purchase luxury items their parks were polluted and their children attended poorly maintained schools He argues that markets alone will under provide or fail to provide at all for many public goods whereas private goods are typically over provided due to the process of advertising creating an artificial demand above the individual s basic needs This emphasis on the power of advertising and consequent over consumption may have anticipated the drop in savings rates in the US and elsewhere in the developing world 7 Galbraith proposed curbing the consumption of certain products through greater use of pigovian taxes and land value taxes 92 arguing that this could be more efficient than other forms of taxation such as labor taxes Galbraith s major proposal was a program he called investment in men a large scale publicly funded education program aimed at empowering ordinary citizens An International Symposium to honor John Kenneth Galbraith sponsored by the l Universite du Littoral Cote d Opale Dunkerque and the Institut de Gestion Sociale Paris France was held in September 2004 in Paris 93 A special issue Commemorating John Kenneth Galbraith s Centenary of the Review of Political Economy was dedicated in 2008 to Galbraith s contribution to economics 94 Three days before his death Galbraith urged his son economist James K Galbraith to write a short book on corporate predation the younger Galbraith completed The Predator State in 2008 Criticism of Galbraith s work edit Galbraith s work in general and The Affluent Society in particular have drawn sharp criticism from laissez faire supporters since the time of their publications Neoliberal and Nobel Prize winning economist Milton Friedman in Friedman on Galbraith and on curing the British disease views Galbraith as a 20th century version of the early 19th century Tory radical of Great Britain He asserts that Galbraith believes in the superiority of aristocracy and in its paternalistic authority that consumers should not be allowed choice and that all should be determined by those with higher minds commenting Many reformers Galbraith is not alone in this have as their basic objection to a free market that it frustrates them in achieving their reforms because it enables people to have what they want not what the reformers want Hence every reformer has a strong tendency to be averse to a free market 95 Nobel Prize winning economist Robert Solow in a review of The New Industrial State points at Galbraith s lack of empiricism and selectiveness in his use of evidence He points out that It may be unjust and pointless to consider the degree of literal truth of each of the assertions that make up this argument One would hardly discuss Gulliver s Travels by debating whether there really are any little people or criticize the Grande Jatte because objects aren t made up of tiny dots Nevertheless it may help to judge the truth of Galbraith s 96 Richard Parker in his biography John Kenneth Galbraith His Life His Economics His Politics characterizes Galbraith as a more complex thinker Galbraith s primary purpose in Capitalism The Concept of Countervailing Power 1952 was ironically to show that big business was now necessary to the American economy to maintain the technological progress that drives economic growth Galbraith knew that the countervailing power which included government regulation and collective bargaining was necessary to balanced and efficient markets In The New Industrial State 1967 Galbraith argued that the dominant American corporations had created a technostructure that closely controlled both consumer demand and market growth through advertising and marketing While Galbraith defended government intervention Parker notes that he also believed that government and big business worked together to maintain stability 97 Paul Krugman downplayed Galbraith s stature as an academic economist in 1994 In Peddling Prosperity he places Galbraith as one among many policy entrepreneurs either economists or think tank writers left and right who write solely for the public as opposed to those who write for other academics and who are therefore liable to make unwarranted diagnoses and offer over simplistic answers to complex economic problems Krugman asserts that Galbraith was never taken seriously by fellow academics who instead viewed him as more of a media personality For example Krugman believes that Galbraith s work The New Industrial State is not considered to be real economic theory and that Economics in Perspective is remarkably ill informed 98 Thomas Sowell wrote in his 1995 book The Vision of the Anointed that Galbraith was a notable teflon prophet alongside American biologist Paul R Ehrlich and institutes like the Club of Rome and Worldwatch Institute they were utterly certain in their predictions yet completely disproven empirically though their reputations remained perfectly undamaged Sowell first noted that in The Affluent Society Galbraith argued that discussions of income inequality in the United States appeared to be declining in urgency However Sowell contended that since 1958 the year Galbraith s book was written preoccupation with income distribution had been at an all time high Next Sowell criticized Galbraith s claims in The Affluent Society and The New Industrial State that large corporations are invincible to competition Sowell refuted this claim by citing Toyota and Honda s takeover of the United States automobile market at the expense of General Motors the previously dominant and allegedly infallible car company Sowell also pointed out the decline of Life magazine the disappearances of W T Grant and Graflex the folding of Pan American the collapse of newspaper companies in cities all across the country the near extinction of Chrysler and overall the displacement of almost half of the firms in 1980 s Fortune 500 in the 1990 edition Sowell s third point of refutation was against Galbraith s assertion in The New Industrial State that successful corporate management was immune to corporate shake ups Sowell penned that in reality heads were rolling in corporate suites across the land The fourth of Galbraith s claims that Sowell believed to not have stood up to the test of time is Galbraith s contemptuousness towards the idea of a lone entrepreneur starting up a new powerful company Sowell used multibillionaires Steve Jobs and Bill Gates as counterexamples 99 Memoirs edit External video nbsp Discussion with Galbraith and biographer Richard Parker May 9 2002 C SPAN nbsp Discussion with Parker on John Kenneth Galbraith His Life His Politics His Economics April 17 2005 C SPANThe first edition of The Scotch was published in the UK under two alternative titles as Made to Last and The Non potable Scotch A Memoir of the Clansmen in Canada 100 It was illustrated by Samuel H Bryant Galbraith s account of his boyhood environment in Elgin County in southern Ontario was added in 1963 He considered it his finest piece of writing 101 Galbraith memoir A Life in Our Times was published in 1981 102 It contains discussion of his thoughts his life and his times In 2004 the publication of an authorized biography John Kenneth Galbraith His Life His Politics His Economics 25 by a friend and fellow progressive economist Richard Parker renewed interest in Galbraith s life journey and legacy Honors editJohn Kenneth Galbraith was one of the few people to receive both the World War II Medal of Freedom and the Presidential Medal of Freedom respectively in 1946 from President Truman and in 2000 from President Bill Clinton 103 He was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1952 104 and the American Philosophical Society in 1980 105 He was a recipient of Lomonosov Gold Medal in 1993 for his contributions to science He also was appointed to the Order of Canada in 1997 75 and in 2001 awarded the Padma Vibhushan India s second highest civilian award for his contributions to strengthening ties between India and the United States 106 The government of France made him a Commandeur de la Legion d honneur Lomonosov Gold Medal in 1993 Order of Canada Officer in 1997 Padma Vibhushan India in 2001In 2010 he became the first economist to have his works included in the Library of America series 107 Minor Planet 4089 Galbraith is named in his honour Honorary degrees edit John Kenneth Galbraith received fifty Honorary Degrees from institutions around the world Honorary DegreesLocation Date School Degree nbsp New York 1958 Bard College Doctor of Laws LL D 108 nbsp Ontario 1961 University of Toronto Doctor of Laws LL D 109 nbsp India 1961 Annamalai University D Litt 110 nbsp Massachusetts October 6 1963 Brandeis University Doctor of Laws LL D 111 nbsp Ontario May 1965 University of Guelph Doctor of Laws LL D 112 nbsp Saskatchewan May 20 1965 University of Saskatchewan Doctor of Laws LL D 113 nbsp Michigan 1966 University of Michigan Doctor of Laws LL D 114 nbsp Massachusetts 1967 Boston College Doctor of Laws LL D 115 nbsp New York 1967 Hobart and William Smith Colleges Doctor of Laws LL D 116 nbsp Ontario 1967 Queen s University Doctor of Laws LL D 117 nbsp Ontario May 31 1968 University of Western Ontario Doctor of Laws LL D 118 nbsp Massachusetts 1968 Tufts University Doctor of Humane Letters DHL 119 nbsp Michigan 1968 Albion College Doctor of Letters D Litt 120 nbsp Illinois 1970 Knox College 121 122 nbsp Michigan Fall 1971 Michigan State University Doctor of Laws LL D 123 124 125 nbsp Ontario Spring 1976 York University Doctor of Laws LL D 126 nbsp Minnesota 1977 Carleton College 127 nbsp New Jersey 1979 Rutgers University Doctor of Laws LL D 128 nbsp Iowa 1983 Grinnell College Doctor of Laws LL D 129 130 nbsp Ontario November 1984 McMaster University Doctor of Letters D Litt 131 nbsp Massachusetts June 1988 Harvard University Doctor of Laws LL D nbsp Massachusetts 1989 Smith College Doctor of Laws LL D 132 nbsp Poland 1992 Warsaw School of Economics Doctorate 133 nbsp United Kingdom June 28 1999 London School of Economics Doctor of Science D Sc 134 nbsp Newfoundland and Labrador Fall 1999 Memorial University of Newfoundland Doctor of Letters D Litt 135 Works editExternal video nbsp Presentation by Galbraith on The Culture of Contentment October 27 1992 C SPAN nbsp Booknotes interview with Galbraith on A Journey Through Economic Time November 13 1994 C SPAN nbsp Presentation by Galbriath on The Good Society May 1 1996 C SPAN nbsp Presentation by Galbraith on Letters to Kennedy May 26 1998 C SPAN nbsp Presentation by Galbraith on Name Dropping From FDR On June 8 1999 C SPANModern Competition and Business Policy with Henry S Dennison 1938 National Resources Planning Board The economic effects of the federal public works expenditures 1933 1938 1940 online A Theory of Price Control 1952 American Capitalism The Concept of Countervailing Power 1952 The Great Crash 1929 1954 Economics and the Art of Controversy 1955 The Affluent Society 1958 online Journey to Poland and Yugoslavia 1958 Perspectives on conservation 1958 The Liberal Hour 1960 Economic Development in Perspective 1962 The Scotch 1963 The McLandress Dimension under the pseudonym Mark Epernay 1963 Economic Development 1964 The New Industrial Estate BBC Reith Lectures 88 1966 The New Industrial State 1967 online Beginner s Guide to American Studies 1967 How to get out of Vietnam 1967 The Triumph novel 1968 Ambassador s Journal 1969 How to control the military 1969 Indian Painting with Mohinder Singh Randhawa 1969 Who needs democrats and what it takes to be needed 1970 The American Left and Some British Comparisons 1971 Economics Peace and Laughter 1972 Power and the Useful Economist 1973 Economics and the Public Purpose 1973 A China Passage 1973 John Kenneth Galbraith introduces India Editor 1974 Money Whence It Came Where It Went 1975 Socialism in rich countries and poor 1975 The Economic effects of the Federal public works expenditures 1933 38 with G Johnson 1975 The Age of Uncertainty PBS and BBC 13 part television series 1977 The Galbraith Reader 1977 Almost Everyone s Guide to Economics with Nicole Salinger 1978 Annals of an Abiding Liberal 1979 The Nature of Mass Poverty 1979 A Life in Our Times 1981 online The Voice of the Poor 1983 The Anatomy of Power 1983 Essays from the Poor to the Rich with Paul McCracken 1983 Reaganomics Meaning Means and Ends 1983 A View from the Stands 1986 Economics in Perspective A Critical History 1987 A History of Economics The Past as the Present 1987 online Capitalism Communism and Coexistence with Stanislav Menshikov 1988 Unconventional Wisdom Essays on Economics in Honour of John Kenneth Galbraith Editor 1989 online A Tenured Professor 1990 The Culture of Contentment 1992 online Recollections of the New Deal When People Mattered Editor 1992 A Journey Through Economic Time 1994 The World Economy Since the Wars A Personal View 1994 online A Short History of Financial Euphoria 1994 The Good Society the humane agenda 1996 Letters to Kennedy 1998 The socially concerned today 1998 Name Dropping From F D R On 1999 The Essential Galbraith 2001 The Economics of Innocent Fraud 2004See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Economics portal nbsp Liberalism portal nbsp Politics portalList of liberal theorists Modern liberalism in the United States The Best and the BrightestNotes edit Pronounced ɡ ae l ˈ b r eɪ 8 gal BRAYTH Canada did not have its own citizenship at the time but later the United States and Canada acknowledged that their citizens who had taken out citizenship in the others countries were recognized as having also retained their original citizenship and Galbraith died as he had been born a Canadian although he had previously been amply honored as a Canadian as well as an American citation needed References edit Keller Robert R 1983 Keynesian and Institutional Economics Compatibility and Complementarity Journal of Economic Issues 17 4 1087 95 doi 10 1080 00213624 1983 11504189 JSTOR 4225383 Davidson Paul 2005 Galbraith and the Post Keynesians Journal of Post Keynesian Economics 28 1 103 13 JSTOR 4225383 a b c Marglin Stephen A Parker Richard Sen Amartya Friedman Benjamin M February 7 2008 John Kenneth Galbraith Harvard Gazette Retrieved July 2 2013 John Kenneth Galbraith The Economist May 4 2006 Retrieved July 3 2013 a b John Kenneth Galbraith Longtime Economics Professor Dies at 97 Harvard Crimson April 2006 Retrieved July 3 2013 Galbraith John Kenneth The Scotch Toronto Macmillan 1964 a b c d e f g Dunn Stephen P Pressman Steven 2005 The Economic Contributions of John Kenneth Galbraith PDF Review of Political Economy 17 2 161 209 doi 10 1080 09538250500067254 S2CID 153867413 Archived from the original PDF on November 29 2013 John Kenneth Galbraith August 16 2012 DUTTON DUNWICH HERITAGE REGISTER AS OF NOVEMBER 2018 PDF Duttondunwich on ca Retrieved July 1 2022 Peterson G M Galbraith J K 1932 Am J Agric Econ 1932 14 2 295 310 link last visited 23 March 2017 PDF Journal of Farm Economics 14 2 295 doi 10 2307 1230112 JSTOR 1230112 Galbraith 1981 ch 6 Galbraith Name Dropping From F D R On 1999 pp 14 15 Galbraith A Life in Our Times pp 90 93 He wrote National Resources Planning Board The economic effects of the federal public works expenditures 1933 1938 1940 online Shinagel Michael 2010 The Gates Unbarred A History of University Extension at Harvard 1910 2009 Harvard University Press p 52 ISBN 978 0674051355 Albalate D 2014 The privatisation and nationalisation of European roads Success and failure in public private partnerships Cheltenham UK Edward Elgar p YIII Rockoff Hugh 2012 America s Economic Way of War War and the U S Economy from the Spanish American War to the Persian Gulf War Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0521676738 Digests of Interpretation of the General Maximum Price Regulation Washington DC Office of Price Administration 1942 Miller J P 1943 The Tactics of Retail Price Control The Quarterly Journal of Economics 57 4 497 521 doi 10 2307 1884653 JSTOR 1884653 Mansfield Harvey C et al 1948 A Short History of OPA Office of Temporary Controls Office of Price Administration a b Carson Thomas and Mary Bonk Gale Encyclopedia of U S Economic History Detroit Gale Group 1999 1 Booknotes interview with Galbraith Archived March 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine on A Journey Through Economic Time November 13 1994 a b Steele Jonathan April 5 2002 Last of the old style liberals The Guardian Profile John Kenneth Galbraith Retrieved July 4 2013 Pressman Steven 2009 Leading Contemporary Economists Economics at the Cutting Edge London Taylor amp Francis p 286 a b Richard Parker The Legacy of John Kenneth Galbraith Archived June 29 2017 at the Wayback Machine johnkennethgalbraith com Parker pp 132 52 Parker pp 156 71 a b J K Galbraith PDF RES Newsletter July 2006 no 132 Royal Economic Society Retrieved July 3 2013 Waligorski Conrad 2006 John Kenneth Galbraith The Economist As Political Theorist Rowman amp Littlefield p 8 ISBN 978 0 7425 3149 9 United States Strategic Bombing Survey Reports Ibiblio org Retrieved July 3 2013 Carroll James 2006 House of War The Pentagon and the Disastrous Rise of American Power Boston Houghton Mifflin Co ISBN 0618872019 p 178 John Kenneth Galbraith 1969 How to Control the Military New American Library Wikidata Q114772547 Galbraith 1981 ch 16 Galbraith 1981 pp 247 255 Parker pp 203 216 Galbraith John Kenneth The Triumph A Novel of Modern Diplomacy Boston Mass Houghton Mifflin 1968 Parker 2005 p 253 254 Parker 2005 p 263 a b c Athale Anil July 28 2003 India China war accidental Galbraith The Rediff Special Rediff India Abroad Retrieved July 4 2013 Parker 2005 p 351 Parker 2005 p 354 Parker 2005 p 355 356 Parker 2005 p 356 Parker 2005 p 356 357 Langguth 2000 p 132 133 a b c Langguth 2000 p 133 Parker 2005 p 359 Langguth 2000 p 157 a b c Langguth 2000 p 172 Gnoinska 2005 p 6 7 Gnoinska 2005 p 6 Gnoinska 2005 p 351 a b c d e McMath Philip October 15 2017 Ken Burns JFK and the unopened door Arkansas Democrat Gazette Langguth 2000 p 383 a b c d e Langguth 2000 p 427 Langguth 2000 p 428 Sundararajan Saroja 2010 Kashmir Crisis Unholy Anglo Pak Nexus Gyan Publishing House pp 299 ISBN 978 81 7835 808 6 Langguth 2000 p 480 a b c d Parker 2005 p 456 Parker 2005 p 454 Karnow 1983 p 558 a b Parker 2005 p 456 457 a b c Parker 2005 p 457 Parker 2005 p 469 470 Parker 2005 p 469 Parker 2005 p 470 Parker 2005 p 470 471 a b c d e f g Parker 2005 p 471 Parker 2005 p 472 Hayashi Stuart K 2015 Hunting Down Social Darwinism Will This Canard Go Extinct Lexington Books p 253 ISBN 9780739186718 Past AEA Officers American Economic Association Archived from the original on September 20 2008 Retrieved October 10 2008 Shuster Donald R 2002 Roman Tmetuchl A Palauan Visionary Roman Tmetuchl Family Trust pp 209 13 ISBN 978 982 9064 01 1 Gvosdev Nikolas K 2017 The Strange Death of Soviet Communism A Postscript Routledge ISBN 9781351473200 Jones Milo Silberzahn Philippe 2013 Constructing Cassandra Reframing Intelligence Failure at the CIA 1947 2001 Stanford University Press p 102 ISBN 9780804787154 Association for Asian Studies AAS 1987 Award for Distinguished Contributions to Asian Studies Archived May 17 2008 at the Wayback Machine retrieved May 31 2011 a b Order of Canada May 17 2007 Archived from the original on May 17 2007 John Kenneth Galbraith in St John s Canadian Broadcasting Corporation October 21 1999 Retrieved October 12 2008 Noble Holcomb B Martin Douglas April 30 2006 John Kenneth Galbraith 97 Dies Economist Held a Mirror to Society The New York Times Retrieved July 3 2013 Collins Phillip Darrell and Collins Paul David 2004 The Ascendancy of the Scientific Dictatorship An Examination of Epistemic Autocracy from the 19th to the 21st Century New York IUniverse ISBN 0595311644 p 125 Galbraith John Kenneth encyclopedia com 2009 Galbraith John Kenneth 1963 The McLandress Dimension Boston Houghton Mifflin Stilwell Frank J B 2002 Political Economy The Contest of Economic Ideas South Melbourne Vic Oxford University Press ISBN 0195575016 Adams Philip 1999 Interview on Radio National Late Night Live Australian Broadcasting Corporation Archived from the original on February 14 2006 Retrieved January 17 2006 Accessed January 17 2006 Sharpe Mike 2006 John Kenneth Galbraith 1908 2006 Challenge The Magazine of Economic Affairs 49 4 7 doi 10 2753 cha0577 5132490401 S2CID 153529393 Galbraith John Kenneth 2010 The Affluent Society amp Other Writings 1952 1967 New York The Library of America ISBN 978 1 59853 077 3 Moyers Bill and Galbraith James K February 22 2011 The Unconventional Wisdom of John Kenneth Galbraith A Conversation with Bill Moyers and James K Galbraith Part 1 4 Video The Grolier Club New York City November 17 2010 The Library of America Archived from the original on November 13 2021 a href Template Cite AV media html title Template Cite AV media cite AV media a CS1 maint location link Galbraith 1958 The Affluent Society Chapter 2 The Concept of Conventional Wisdom Noble Holcomb B and Martin Douglas April 30 2006 John Kenneth Galbraith 97 Dies Economist Diplomat and Writer The New York Times a b The Reith Lectures BBC Radio 4 Retrieved July 3 2013 The Reith Lectures J K Galbraith The New Industrial State 1966 BBC Radio 4 Retrieved July 3 2013 Galbraith John K 1970 Economics as a System of Belief PDF American Economic Review 60 2 469 78 Archived from the original PDF on March 26 2009 a b Galbraith JK 1977 Money Where It Came Whence It Went Houghton Mifflin Bourke Joe Opinion Land Value Tax an old idea with lots of modern supporters Retrieved September 24 2013 Laperche Blandine and Dimitri Uzunidis John Kenneth Galbraith and the Future of Economics Papers from the International Symposium Honoring John Kenneth Galbraith Held in Paris in September 2004 Basingstoke England Palgrave Macmillan 2005 Special Issue of the Review of Political Economy Commemorating John Kenneth Galbraith s Centenary Taylor amp Francis Vol 20 no 4 2008 Retrieved July 2 2013 Friedman Milton 1977 Friedman on Galbraith and on Curing the British Disease The Fraser Institute ISBN 0 88975 015 7 The New Industrial State Son of Affluence Retrieved September 26 2017 Madrick J May 26 2005 A Mind of His Own Review of John Kenneth Galbraith His Life His Economics His Politics Archived March 9 2016 at the Wayback Machine The New York Review of Books Krugman Paul 1994 Peddling Prosperity Scranton Pennsylvania W W Norton ISBN 978 0 393 31292 8 pp 10 15 Sowell Thomas 1995 The Vision of the Anointed Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 08995 6 pp 64 65 Galbraith John Kenneth 1964 The Scotch Boston Houghton Mifflin Parker p 435 Galbraith 1981 Liberal thinker JK Galbraith dies an April 2006 BBC article John Kenneth Galbraith American Academy of Arts amp Sciences Retrieved June 15 2022 APS Member History search amphilsoc org Retrieved June 15 2022 Galbraith receives prestigious award Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine a June 2001 Harvard News Gazette article John Kenneth Galbraith The Affluent Society and Other Writings 1952 1967 ed James K Galbraith New York The Library of America 2010 ISBN 978 1 59853 077 3 College Bard Bard College Catalogue Bard edu University of Toronto Honorary Degree Recipients 1850 2014 Sorted Alphabetically by Name of Recipient June 2014 governingcouncil utoronto ca Galbraith John Kenneth Ambassador s Journal p 211 New American Library New York NY 1970 Honorary Degree Recipients Board of Trustees Brandeis University Brandeis edu University of Guelph Document Center uoguelph civicweb net Honorary Degrees December 23 2014 Honorary Degrees PDF president umich edu Honorary Degrees Awarded by Boston College 1952 1998 bc edu Hobart and William Smith Colleges Honorary Degree Recipients Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved July 1 2022 Honorary Degrees PDF Queensu ca University of Western Ontario Honorary Degrees Awarded 1881 present PDF Archived February 12 2012 at the Wayback Machine Honorary Degrees trustees tufts edu The Personal Papers of John Kenneth Galbraith 1908 2006 Biographical Note PDF National Archives and Records Administration John F Kennedy Library Archived from the original PDF on January 6 2014 Retrieved July 3 2013 Honorary Degrees Knox College knox edu Honorary Degrees 1900 1999 Knox College Honorary Degrees Knox College Knox edu Michigan State University Commencement speakers commencement msu edu Honorary degree recipients 1885 2015 Vice President for Research and Graduate Studies Vprgs msu edu MSU Honorary Degree Recipients Alphabetical List Vice President for Research and Graduate Studies Vprgs msu edu Honorary Degree Recipients University Secretariat Secretariat info yorku ca Honorary Degree Recipients Honorary Degrees Carleton College Apps carleton edu Past Honorary Degree Recipients Archived February 14 2012 at the Wayback Machine Grinnell College Honorary degrees grinnell edu Past Honorary Degrees Grinnell College Grinnell edu Archived from the original on February 23 2017 Retrieved February 1 2018 Honorary Degree Recipients Chronological PDF Mcmaster ca Honorary Degrees Smith College Smith edu Doktorzy honoris causa rok nadania tytulu Warsaw School of Economics Professor Galbraith to receive honorary degree Archived from the original on April 22 2013 Retrieved July 1 2022 John Kenneth Galbraith Memorial University of Newfoundland Works cited edit Galbraith John Kenneth 1981 A Life in Our Times Memoirs Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0345303233 Gnoinska Margaret March 2005 Poland and Vietnam 1963 New Evidence on Secret Communist Diplomacy and the Maneli Affair Cold War International History Project Working Paper 45 2 83 Karnow Stanley 1983 Vietnam A History New York Viking ISBN 0670746045 Langguth A J 2000 Our Vietnam The War 1954 1975 New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0743212444 Parker Richard 2005 John Kenneth Galbraith His Life His Politics His Economics New York Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0226646770 Obituaries edit Feeney Mark April 30 2006 John Kenneth Galbraith writer economist dies The Boston Globe Noble Holcomb B Martin Douglas April 30 2006 John Kenneth Galbraith 97 Dies Economist Held a Mirror to Society The New York Times Retrieved May 6 2010 Barnes Bart May 1 2006 John Kenneth Galbraith Popularized Modern Economics The Washington Post Retrieved May 6 2010 Famed economist John Kenneth Galbraith dies at 97 USA Today April 30 2006 Retrieved July 11 2013 John Kenneth Galbraith Longtime Economics Professor Dies at 97 Harvard Crimson April 30 2006 Retrieved July 3 2013 Gewertz Ken May 4 2006 John Kenneth Galbraith economist professor and author Harvard icon dies at 97 Harvard University Gazette Archived from the original on February 8 2011 Retrieved July 11 2013 David R Henderson December 1 2006 John Kenneth Galbraith A Criticism and an Appreciation Foundation for Economic Education Wikidata Q114796509 Hodgson Godfrey May 1 2006 Professor J K Galbraith Author of The Affluent Society and one of the action intellectuals of mid 20th century America The Independent Archived from the original on October 11 2010 Retrieved July 11 2013 Obituary John Kenneth Galbraith BBC News April 30 2006 Retrieved July 11 2013 Further reading editHession Charles H 1972 John Kenneth Galbraith amp his critics New York New American Library LCCN 78176428 Keaney Michael ed 2001 Economist with a public purpose essays in honour of John Kenneth Galbraith Routledge frontiers of political economy London New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 21292 2 Laperche Blandine Uzunidis Dimitri eds 2005 John Kenneth Galbraith and the future of economics Basingstoke England New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 1 4039 9616 9 Papers from the International Symposium Honoring John Kenneth Galbraith Held in Paris in September 2004 Reisman David A 1980 Galbraith and market capitalism New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 7380 2 Sobel Robert 1980 The worldly economists New York Free Press ISBN 978 0 02 929780 3 Stone Irving 1970 There was light Autobiography of a university Berkeley 1868 1968 1st ed Garden City N Y Doubleday LCCN 77078738 Thacker Innes 1980 Ideological Control and the Depoliticisation of Language in Bold Christine ed Cencrastus No 2 Spring 1980 pp 30 33 ISSN 0264 0856 Waligorski Conrad 2006 John Kenneth Galbraith the economist as political theorist 20th century political thinkers Lanham Md Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 7425 3148 2 Primary sources edit Galbraith John Kenneth 2001 Williams Andrea D ed The essential Galbraith Boston Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 618 11963 9 Galbraith John Kenneth 2017 Holt Richard P F ed The selected letters of John Kenneth Galbraith New York NY Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107019881 Galbraith John Kenneth 2004 Stanfield J Ron Stanfield Jacqueline Bloom eds Interviews with John Kenneth Galbraith Conversations with public intellectuals series Jackson University Press of Mississippi ISBN 978 1 57806 610 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Kenneth Galbraith nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to John Kenneth Galbraith John Kenneth Galbraith 1908 2006 The Concise Encyclopedia of Economics Library of Economics and Liberty 2nd ed Liberty Fund 2008 Speech by John Kenneth Galbraith on March 22 1968 discussing the impact of Vietnam on American life Audio recording from The University of Alabama s Emphasis Symposium on Contemporary Issues Appearances on C SPAN Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Kenneth Galbraith amp oldid 1179428874, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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