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Leon C. Marshall

Leon Carroll Marshall (March 15, 1879 – March 1966) was an American economist, Professor of Political Economy and fourth dean of the Booth School of Business from 1909 to 1924, Professor at the Law School of the Johns Hopkins University, and Professor at the American University. He is known for his works on our economic organization,[1] business administration,[2] curriculum-making in the social studies[3] and the divorce court.[4]

Leon C. Marshall
Leon Carroll Marshall at the University of Chicago, c. 1920.
BornMarch 15, 1879
DiedMarch 1966
NationalityAmerican
Academic career
InstitutionsBooth School of Business, Johns Hopkins University
FieldPolitical Economy, economic organization, and business administration
Alma materOhio Wesleyan University, Harvard University, Ohio Wesleyan University

Biography Edit

Born in Zanesville, Ohio in 1879, Marshall in 1900 obtained his BA at the Ohio Wesleyan University, and in 1902 his MA from Harvard University, Later on in 1918 he obtained his law degree at the Ohio Wesleyan University.[5]

Marshall started his academic career at the business school of the University of Chicago, the Booth School of Business, where he became Professor of Political Economy and was fourth dean of the business school from 1909 to 1924. Sequentially he moved to the Johns Hopkins University, where he was professor and director of its Institute of Law from 1928 to 1933. In 1934 Marshall was appointed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt as member of the National Labor Board and of the National Recovery Administration to support Roosevelt's New Deal policies and the "measure and combat the effects of the Great Depression."[5] He also became a member of the National Educational Association. From 1936 to 1948 Marshall was Professor of Political Economy at American University in Washington, D.C.

Marshall wrote several textbooks on Social Studies topics at the secondary school and grade-school level, starting with Materials For the Study of Elementary Economics in 1913 coauthored with James A. Field (1879-1927) and Chester Whitney Wright (1880-1966).[5]

Work Edit

Marshall came into prominence in the years from 1913 to 1919, when he was involved with professor of Economics James A. Field and the economic historian Chester W. Wright in "attempts to move economics instruction away from the 'rigorous drill in orthodox theory' or the 'straight-jacket of conventional theory' to a method of instruction emphasizing the development of economic institutions, inquiry into current problems and issues, and fostering of creativity and originality (field 1917). To this end, they produced a book of readings to supplement the usual texts (Marshall, Wright, and Field 1913)."[6]

Readings in Industrial Society, 1918 Edit

 
Title page, 1918/20.

In 1918 Marshall published his Readings in Industrial Society. This work had a heavy emphasis on the institutional development of industrial society, the money economy and financial organization, machine industry, the wage system and the worker, industrial concentration, competition, private property, and social control."[6]

The work contained reading from founders of the institutional economics such as Thorstein Veblen, Wesley Clair Mitchell, Walton H. Hamilton, Harold G. Moulton, Robert F. Hoxie, John M. Clark, Edwin Cannan, and John A. Hobson.[6] He also reprinted diagrams from the work of Henry Rogers Seager, picturing the economic production and distribution from 1904,[7] and Paul Nystrom, picturing the channels of distribution for various lines of goods from 1915.[8]

Leon Ardzrooni, known as "Veblen's most faithful disciple",[9] reviewed the book for Political Science Quarterly, and introduced the work as follows:

As indicated in the subtitle of this formidable volume, the author has brought together a large array of descriptive material for " a study in the structure and functioning of economic organization." Among a considerable number of students in the social sciences the feeling has been growing that economics, as studied in our colleges and universities, lacks the substance and security which is often obtained in other fields of intellectual endeavor by a happy coordination of historical perspective and speculative logomachy. With a view to attain such an end, there have appeared in recent years several volumes of " selected readings " for the study of economics and economic problems. The present one is a creditable addition to this goodly list in the publication of which the University of Chicago Press has taken a leading part.[10]

Clarence Edwin Ayres explicitly regarded "Marshall's book as a contribution to the institutional type of economics."[6]

Our economic organization, 1921 Edit

 
Title page, 1921

In 1921 Marshall and Leverett S. Lyon (1885-1959) published their "Our economic organization." The main purpose of this book in the field of elementary economics is to present in systematic fashion the structure of economic society under the spur of competition.[11]

The treatment is necessarily brief on account of the large number of topics to be covered, and also on account of the requirements of an elementary text book. The approach is functional. The authors stated in its preface the purpose is to present economic organization in its functional aspect, to show in some detail not so much what the organization is as how it operates.[11]

The distinguishing feature of the volume is the effort to depict social structures in terms of what they do. The functions, the uses, the work, of banks, of business organization, of competition, of specialization], of government, of scientific management, of education, and of other multitudinous agencies which together make up our want-gratifying machine, are the matters with which the book is concerned.[12]

And more even specific "it is a study of the devices which exist in industrial society, primarily in terms of their activities, and, quite secondarily, in terms of their structures."[12]

Economic organization compared to machine; a process approach to economics Edit

In a 1921 review of the work The American Economic Review, by Everett Walton Goodhue (1878-1940s), Professor of Sociology and Economics at Colgate University,[13] Goodhue explained, that this work compares the economic organization to machine, and introduces a process approach (or systems approach) to economics. Goodhue (1921) explained.

 
Diagram of want-gratifying goods.
 
Different forms of Wealth in 1912.
 
Diagram of gratifying wants, 1921

Our economic organization is compared to a machine with parts, articulation of parts, motive power, and control or guidance. No one claims that the machine at all times or perhaps at any time works perfectly. There are still many defects. Some parts are not well adapted to their uses; parts rattle, jam and squeak; too much or perchance at times too little motive power is applied; and at times (business depressions) the whole machine seems to break down. Despite the defects, however, the machine functions and is surprisingly well adapted to its purpose of producing goods in quantity, of producing them at right times, and of getting them into the hands of consumers with some accuracy and comparatively little difficulty.
The real test of any good machine is that it be designed for its purpose and that it accomplish that purpose at as low a cost as possible under the conditions which prevail at the time. Our economic machine appears to fulfill these conditions. On this point, indeed, many earnest students of economics honestly doubt the truth of the above statement. They see glaring faults of economy and justice, and take decided exception to the proposition that the present economic organization is adapted to its purpose. Possibly in the past, it is said, but certainly not today.[11]

The complete work is illustrated with over 100 illustrations; tables, schemes, pictures, drawings, maps, graphs, block diagrams, tree diagrams, classification and organization charts, presenting a mix of empirical and theoretical data. The process approach is recognizable in the visualization of some specific economic phenomena in diagrams, such as the diagram of gratifying wants (see image).

Goodhue (1921) further explained, that the book at the outset rather assumes human wants and the goods to gratify those wants. Its interest lies in the field of processes. The aim was to start the student in elementary economics with a study of our want gratifying machine, to show him how this machine has come to be, and how it serves its purpose in apportioning our social resources, viz: labor power, capital, acquired knowledge and natural resources to the production and sale of goods.[11]

Although this approach to economics in its time was somewhat new and rather unorthodox, nevertheless there was much to be said in its favor, according to Goodhue (1921):[11]

  • It serves at the outset to develop an interest in economics in the mind of the student, a thing much to be desired.
  • It introduces the student to something with which he is a bit familiar, instead of very early in the course dropping him down into the midst of an elusive exposition of marginal utility and marginal cost.
  • In describing for the student the existing system of economic organization it better prepares him to grasp the difficulties of terminology and theory on which the organization is based.

There is no attempt to expound principles. All that is left to be taken up at a later point in the course. Those who have taught elementary economics will appreciate the difficulty of interesting and holding the students when they are plunged at the outset into the midst of the complexities of utility, value, and prices. This book goes far to solve that most difficult problem of arousing student interest in the course. It was considered eminently practical, readable, suggestive, and as such merits consideration.[11]

Topics discussed in the book Edit

The topics discussed in the book are in the main those of Professor Marshall's more pretentious work Readings in Industrial Society. The first two chapters on human wants and social resources aim to show the reasons for any form of economic organization.

Then follow six chapters on English industrial history which, as the authors state, "are not 'historical' in any orthodox sense of the term. They are a somewhat more extended view of the problem at issue." The remainder of the book is taken up with a functionalized description of the economic organization of the United States. There are four chapters on specialization, two on machine industry, three on business organization, three on the province of the enterpriser, two each on money and financial organization and the utilization of natural and human resources, and one on planning, guiding, and controlling.[11]

Reception Edit

A 1921 review of this work by Goodhue,[11] states that:

... it is clear that what should be included, what should be excluded, where the emphasis should be placed is largely a matter of choice, and is somewhat dependent upon the purpose the authors have in mind. Not all topics which quite fall within the scope of the book can be equally well treated, especially if the work is elementary in character. It may be a source of disappointment to certain readers that the authors have done little more than to suggest or imply at some points in their discussion the motive forces of organization. We find comparatively little on gain-seeking, prices, competition, property, contract, and the necessities for interdependence.[11]

And furthermore:

The book does not pretend to cover the entire field of economics. It is designed merely as an introductory text and can well be combined with some one of the standard works on the Principles of Economics. As a stimulating, attractive, readable book it is a great success. The authors should be complimented on making available this material on economic organization in such a clear and teachable form. The practical questions at the end of each chapter are helpful and suggestive, and add a good deal to the teachable qualities of the book.[11]

Selected publications Edit

  • Field, James Alfred; Marshall, Leon Carroll; Wright, Chester Whitney. Materials For the Study of Elementary Economics, University of Chicago Press, 1913.
  • Judd, Charles Hubbard, and Leon Carroll Marshall. Lessons in community and national life. Series B, for the first class of the high school and the upper grades of the elementary school. United States. Bureau of Education; United States. Food and Drug Administration, 1918.
  • Marshall, Leon Carroll, Readings in industrial society; a study in the structure and functioning of modern economic organization. Chicago : University of Chicago Press, 1920.
  • Leon C. Marshall and Leverett S. Lyon. Our economic organization. New York : Te Macmillan Company, 1921.
  • Marshall, Leon Carroll, Business administration. Chicago, Ill., The University of Chicago press, 1921.
  • Marshall, Leon Carroll. The story of human progress. The Macmillan company, 1925.
  • Marshall, L. C., May, G., Marquard, E. L., & Reticker. The Divorce Court. Johns Hopkins Press, 1932.
  • Marshall, Leon Carroll, and Rachel Marshall Goetz. Curriculum-making in the Social Studies. C. Scribner's sons, 1936.

References Edit

  1. ^ Fitts, Charles Tabor, and Fletcher Harper Swift. The construction of orientation courses for college freshmen. Vol. 2. University of California Press, 1928.
  2. ^ Tannenbaum, Robert. "The manager concept: a rational synthesis." Journal of Business of the University of Chicago (1949): 225-241.
  3. ^ Thornton, Stephen J. Teaching social studies that matters: Curriculum for active learning. Teachers College Press, 2005.
  4. ^ Mnookin, Robert H., and Lewis Kornhauser. "Bargaining in the shadow of the law: The case of divorce." Yale Law Journal (1979): 950-997.
  5. ^ a b c L. C. Marshall Papers, at american.edu. Accessed Jan. 1, 2014.
  6. ^ a b c d Malcolm Rutherford (2011). The Institutionalist Movement in American Economics. p. 132
  7. ^ Marshall (1918, p. 23-24)
  8. ^ Marshall (1918, p. 258)
  9. ^ Thorstein Veblen (1963) The Engineers and the Price System. p. 33, footnote 34.
  10. ^ Leon Ardzrooni. "Reviewed Work: Readings in Industrial Society. by Leon Carroll Marshall," in: Political Science Quarterly. Vol. 34, No. 3 (Sep., 1919), pp. 503-505
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Everett W. Goodhue. "Reviewed Work: Our Economic Organization by Leon C. Marshall, Leverett S. Lyon," in: The American Economic Review, Vol. 11, No. 4 (Dec., 1921), pp. 663-665.
  12. ^ a b Marshal & Lyon (1921, p. v)
  13. ^ New York (State). Legislature. Senate (1910). Documents of the Senate of the State of New York. p. 925
Attribution

  This article incorporates public domain material from the 1921 review by Everett W. Goodhue.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Leon C. Marshall at Wikimedia Commons
  • L. C. Marshall Papers at american.edu

leon, marshall, leon, carroll, marshall, march, 1879, march, 1966, american, economist, professor, political, economy, fourth, dean, booth, school, business, from, 1909, 1924, professor, school, johns, hopkins, university, professor, american, university, know. Leon Carroll Marshall March 15 1879 March 1966 was an American economist Professor of Political Economy and fourth dean of the Booth School of Business from 1909 to 1924 Professor at the Law School of the Johns Hopkins University and Professor at the American University He is known for his works on our economic organization 1 business administration 2 curriculum making in the social studies 3 and the divorce court 4 Leon C MarshallLeon Carroll Marshall at the University of Chicago c 1920 BornMarch 15 1879Zanesville OhioDiedMarch 1966NationalityAmericanAcademic careerInstitutionsBooth School of Business Johns Hopkins UniversityFieldPolitical Economy economic organization and business administrationAlma materOhio Wesleyan University Harvard University Ohio Wesleyan University Contents 1 Biography 2 Work 2 1 Readings in Industrial Society 1918 2 2 Our economic organization 1921 2 2 1 Economic organization compared to machine a process approach to economics 2 2 2 Topics discussed in the book 2 2 3 Reception 3 Selected publications 4 References 5 External linksBiography EditBorn in Zanesville Ohio in 1879 Marshall in 1900 obtained his BA at the Ohio Wesleyan University and in 1902 his MA from Harvard University Later on in 1918 he obtained his law degree at the Ohio Wesleyan University 5 Marshall started his academic career at the business school of the University of Chicago the Booth School of Business where he became Professor of Political Economy and was fourth dean of the business school from 1909 to 1924 Sequentially he moved to the Johns Hopkins University where he was professor and director of its Institute of Law from 1928 to 1933 In 1934 Marshall was appointed by President Franklin D Roosevelt as member of the National Labor Board and of the National Recovery Administration to support Roosevelt s New Deal policies and the measure and combat the effects of the Great Depression 5 He also became a member of the National Educational Association From 1936 to 1948 Marshall was Professor of Political Economy at American University in Washington D C Marshall wrote several textbooks on Social Studies topics at the secondary school and grade school level starting with Materials For the Study of Elementary Economics in 1913 coauthored with James A Field 1879 1927 and Chester Whitney Wright 1880 1966 5 Work EditMarshall came into prominence in the years from 1913 to 1919 when he was involved with professor of Economics James A Field and the economic historian Chester W Wright in attempts to move economics instruction away from the rigorous drill in orthodox theory or the straight jacket of conventional theory to a method of instruction emphasizing the development of economic institutions inquiry into current problems and issues and fostering of creativity and originality field 1917 To this end they produced a book of readings to supplement the usual texts Marshall Wright and Field 1913 6 Readings in Industrial Society 1918 Edit Title page 1918 20 In 1918 Marshall published his Readings in Industrial Society This work had a heavy emphasis on the institutional development of industrial society the money economy and financial organization machine industry the wage system and the worker industrial concentration competition private property and social control 6 The work contained reading from founders of the institutional economics such as Thorstein Veblen Wesley Clair Mitchell Walton H Hamilton Harold G Moulton Robert F Hoxie John M Clark Edwin Cannan and John A Hobson 6 He also reprinted diagrams from the work of Henry Rogers Seager picturing the economic production and distribution from 1904 7 and Paul Nystrom picturing the channels of distribution for various lines of goods from 1915 8 Leon Ardzrooni known as Veblen s most faithful disciple 9 reviewed the book for Political Science Quarterly and introduced the work as follows As indicated in the subtitle of this formidable volume the author has brought together a large array of descriptive material for a study in the structure and functioning of economic organization Among a considerable number of students in the social sciences the feeling has been growing that economics as studied in our colleges and universities lacks the substance and security which is often obtained in other fields of intellectual endeavor by a happy coordination of historical perspective and speculative logomachy With a view to attain such an end there have appeared in recent years several volumes of selected readings for the study of economics and economic problems The present one is a creditable addition to this goodly list in the publication of which the University of Chicago Press has taken a leading part 10 Clarence Edwin Ayres explicitly regarded Marshall s book as a contribution to the institutional type of economics 6 Our economic organization 1921 Edit Title page 1921In 1921 Marshall and Leverett S Lyon 1885 1959 published their Our economic organization The main purpose of this book in the field of elementary economics is to present in systematic fashion the structure of economic society under the spur of competition 11 The treatment is necessarily brief on account of the large number of topics to be covered and also on account of the requirements of an elementary text book The approach is functional The authors stated in its preface the purpose is to present economic organization in its functional aspect to show in some detail not so much what the organization is as how it operates 11 The distinguishing feature of the volume is the effort to depict social structures in terms of what they do The functions the uses the work of banks of business organization of competition of specialization of government of scientific management of education and of other multitudinous agencies which together make up our want gratifying machine are the matters with which the book is concerned 12 And more even specific it is a study of the devices which exist in industrial society primarily in terms of their activities and quite secondarily in terms of their structures 12 Economic organization compared to machine a process approach to economics Edit In a 1921 review of the work The American Economic Review by Everett Walton Goodhue 1878 1940s Professor of Sociology and Economics at Colgate University 13 Goodhue explained that this work compares the economic organization to machine and introduces a process approach or systems approach to economics Goodhue 1921 explained Diagram of want gratifying goods Different forms of Wealth in 1912 Diagram of gratifying wants 1921Our economic organization is compared to a machine with parts articulation of parts motive power and control or guidance No one claims that the machine at all times or perhaps at any time works perfectly There are still many defects Some parts are not well adapted to their uses parts rattle jam and squeak too much or perchance at times too little motive power is applied and at times business depressions the whole machine seems to break down Despite the defects however the machine functions and is surprisingly well adapted to its purpose of producing goods in quantity of producing them at right times and of getting them into the hands of consumers with some accuracy and comparatively little difficulty The real test of any good machine is that it be designed for its purpose and that it accomplish that purpose at as low a cost as possible under the conditions which prevail at the time Our economic machine appears to fulfill these conditions On this point indeed many earnest students of economics honestly doubt the truth of the above statement They see glaring faults of economy and justice and take decided exception to the proposition that the present economic organization is adapted to its purpose Possibly in the past it is said but certainly not today 11 The complete work is illustrated with over 100 illustrations tables schemes pictures drawings maps graphs block diagrams tree diagrams classification and organization charts presenting a mix of empirical and theoretical data The process approach is recognizable in the visualization of some specific economic phenomena in diagrams such as the diagram of gratifying wants see image Goodhue 1921 further explained that the book at the outset rather assumes human wants and the goods to gratify those wants Its interest lies in the field of processes The aim was to start the student in elementary economics with a study of our want gratifying machine to show him how this machine has come to be and how it serves its purpose in apportioning our social resources viz labor power capital acquired knowledge and natural resources to the production and sale of goods 11 Although this approach to economics in its time was somewhat new and rather unorthodox nevertheless there was much to be said in its favor according to Goodhue 1921 11 It serves at the outset to develop an interest in economics in the mind of the student a thing much to be desired It introduces the student to something with which he is a bit familiar instead of very early in the course dropping him down into the midst of an elusive exposition of marginal utility and marginal cost In describing for the student the existing system of economic organization it better prepares him to grasp the difficulties of terminology and theory on which the organization is based There is no attempt to expound principles All that is left to be taken up at a later point in the course Those who have taught elementary economics will appreciate the difficulty of interesting and holding the students when they are plunged at the outset into the midst of the complexities of utility value and prices This book goes far to solve that most difficult problem of arousing student interest in the course It was considered eminently practical readable suggestive and as such merits consideration 11 Topics discussed in the book Edit The topics discussed in the book are in the main those of Professor Marshall s more pretentious work Readings in Industrial Society The first two chapters on human wants and social resources aim to show the reasons for any form of economic organization Then follow six chapters on English industrial history which as the authors state are not historical in any orthodox sense of the term They are a somewhat more extended view of the problem at issue The remainder of the book is taken up with a functionalized description of the economic organization of the United States There are four chapters on specialization two on machine industry three on business organization three on the province of the enterpriser two each on money and financial organization and the utilization of natural and human resources and one on planning guiding and controlling 11 Reception Edit A 1921 review of this work by Goodhue 11 states that it is clear that what should be included what should be excluded where the emphasis should be placed is largely a matter of choice and is somewhat dependent upon the purpose the authors have in mind Not all topics which quite fall within the scope of the book can be equally well treated especially if the work is elementary in character It may be a source of disappointment to certain readers that the authors have done little more than to suggest or imply at some points in their discussion the motive forces of organization We find comparatively little on gain seeking prices competition property contract and the necessities for interdependence 11 And furthermore The book does not pretend to cover the entire field of economics It is designed merely as an introductory text and can well be combined with some one of the standard works on the Principles of Economics As a stimulating attractive readable book it is a great success The authors should be complimented on making available this material on economic organization in such a clear and teachable form The practical questions at the end of each chapter are helpful and suggestive and add a good deal to the teachable qualities of the book 11 Selected publications EditField James Alfred Marshall Leon Carroll Wright Chester Whitney Materials For the Study of Elementary Economics University of Chicago Press 1913 Judd Charles Hubbard and Leon Carroll Marshall Lessons in community and national life Series B for the first class of the high school and the upper grades of the elementary school United States Bureau of Education United States Food and Drug Administration 1918 Marshall Leon Carroll Readings in industrial society a study in the structure and functioning of modern economic organization Chicago University of Chicago Press 1920 Leon C Marshall and Leverett S Lyon Our economic organization New York Te Macmillan Company 1921 Marshall Leon Carroll Business administration Chicago Ill The University of Chicago press 1921 Marshall Leon Carroll The story of human progress The Macmillan company 1925 Marshall L C May G Marquard E L amp Reticker The Divorce Court Johns Hopkins Press 1932 Marshall Leon Carroll and Rachel Marshall Goetz Curriculum making in the Social Studies C Scribner s sons 1936 References Edit Fitts Charles Tabor and Fletcher Harper Swift The construction of orientation courses for college freshmen Vol 2 University of California Press 1928 Tannenbaum Robert The manager concept a rational synthesis Journal of Business of the University of Chicago 1949 225 241 Thornton Stephen J Teaching social studies that matters Curriculum for active learning Teachers College Press 2005 Mnookin Robert H and Lewis Kornhauser Bargaining in the shadow of the law The case of divorce Yale Law Journal 1979 950 997 a b c L C Marshall Papers at american edu Accessed Jan 1 2014 a b c d Malcolm Rutherford 2011 The Institutionalist Movement in American Economics p 132 Marshall 1918 p 23 24 Marshall 1918 p 258 Thorstein Veblen 1963 The Engineers and the Price System p 33 footnote 34 Leon Ardzrooni Reviewed Work Readings in Industrial Society by Leon Carroll Marshall in Political Science Quarterly Vol 34 No 3 Sep 1919 pp 503 505 a b c d e f g h i j Everett W Goodhue Reviewed Work Our Economic Organization by Leon C Marshall Leverett S Lyon in The American Economic Review Vol 11 No 4 Dec 1921 pp 663 665 a b Marshal amp Lyon 1921 p v New York State Legislature Senate 1910 Documents of the Senate of the State of New York p 925 Attribution This article incorporates public domain material from the 1921 review by Everett W Goodhue External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Leon C Marshall Media related to Leon C Marshall at Wikimedia Commons L C Marshall Papers at american edu Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leon C Marshall amp oldid 1124010607, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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