Sylvia Nasar

Grand Pursuit: A Story of Economic Genius


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      GRAND PURSUIT

      Sylvia Nasar

      THE STORY OF

      ECONOMIC GENIUS

       Dedication

      For my parents

      Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

       Dedication

      Preface: The Nine Parts of Mankind

      Act I: Hope

      Prologue: Mr. Sentiment Versus Scrooge

       Chapter IV: Cross of Gold: Fisher and the Money Illusion

       Chapter V: Creative Destruction: Schumpeter and Economic Evolution

       Act II: Fear

       Prologue: War of the Worlds

       Chapter VI: The Last Days of Mankind: Schumpeter in Vienna

       Chapter VII: Europe Is Dying: Keynes at Versailles

       Chapter VIII: The Joyless Street: Schumpeter and Hayek in Vienna

       Chapter IX: Immaterial Devices of the Mind: Keynes and Fisher in the 1920s

       Chapter X: Magneto Trouble: Keynes and Fisher in the Great Depression

       Chapter XI: Experiments: Webb and Robinson in the 1930s

       Chapter XII: The Economists’ War: Keynes and Friedman at the Treasury

       Act III: Confidence

       Prologue: Nothing to Fear

       Chapter XIII: Exile: Schumpeter and Hayek in World War II

       Chapter XIV: Past and Future: Keynes at Bretton Woods

       Chapter XV: The Road from Serfdom: Hayek and the German Miracle

       Chapter XVI: Instruments of Mastery: Samuelson Goes to Washington

       Chapter XVII: Grand Illusion: Robinson in Moscow and Beijing

       Chapter XVIII: Tryst with Destiny: Sen in Calcutta and Cambridge

       Epilogue: Imagining the Future

      Notes

      Index

      Picture Section

      Acknowledgments

      About the Author

      Also by Sylvia Nasar

      Credits

      Copyright

       About the Publisher

       Preface The Nine Parts of Mankind

      The experience of nations with well-being is exceedingly brief. Nearly all, throughout history, have been very poor.

      John Kenneth Galbraith, The Affluent Society, 19581

      In a Misery of this Sort, admitting some few Lenities, and those too but a few, nine Parts in ten of the whole Race of Mankind drudge through Life.

      Edmund Burke, A Vindication of Natural Society, 17562

      The idea that humanity could turn tables on economic necessity—mastering rather than being enslaved by material circumstances—is so new that Jane Austen never entertained it.

      Consider the world of Georgian opulence that the author of Pride and Prejudice inhabited. A citizen of a country whose wealth “excited the wonder, the astonishment, and perhaps the envy of the world” her life coincided with the triumphs over superstition, ignorance, and tyranny we call the European Enlightenment.3 She was born into the “middle ranks” of English society when “middle” meant the opposite of average or typical. Compared to Mr. Bennett in Pride and Prejudice or even the unfortunate Ms. Dashwoods in Sense and Sensibility,4 the Austens were quite impecunious. Nonetheless, their income of £210 a year exceeded that of 95 percent of English families at the time.5 Despite the “vulgar economy” that Austen was required to practice to prevent “discomfort, wretchedness and ruin,”6 her family owned property, had some leisure, chose their professions, went to school, had books, writing paper, and newspapers at their disposal. Neither Jane nor her sister Cassandra were forced to hire themselves out as governesses—the dreaded fate that awaits Emma’s rival Jane—or marry men they did not love.

      The gulf between the Austens and the so-called lower orders was, in the words of a biographer, “absolute and unquestioned.”7 Edmund Burke, the philosopher, railed at the plight of miners who “scarce ever see the Light of the Sun; they are buried in the Bowels of the Earth; there they work at a severe and dismal Task, without the least Prospect of being delivered from it; they subsist upon the coarsest and worst sort of Fare; they have their Health miserably impaired, and their Lives cut short.”8 Yet in terms of their standard of living, even these “unhappy wretches” were among the relatively fortunate.

      The typical Englishman was a farm laborer.9 According to economic historian Gregory Clark, his material standard of living was not much better than that of an average Roman slave. His cottage consisted of a single dark room shared night and day with wife, children, and livestock. His only source of heat was a smoky wood cooking fire. He owned a single set of clothing. He traveled no farther than his feet could carry him. His only recreations were sex and poaching. He received no medical attention. He was very likely illiterate. His children were put to work watching the cows or scaring the crows until they were old enough to be sent into “service.”

      In good times, he ate only the coarsest food—wheat and barley in the form of bread or mush. Even potatoes were a luxury beyond his reach. (“They are very well for you gentry but they must be terribly costly to rear,” a villager told Austen’s mother).10 Clark estimates that the British farm laborer consumed an average of only 1500 calories a day, one third fewer than a member of a modern hunter-gatherer tribe in New Guinea or the Amazon.11 In addition to suffering chronic hunger, extreme fluctuations in bread prices put him at risk of outright starvation. Eighteenth-century death rates were extraordinarily sensitive to bad harvests and wartime inflations.12 Yet the typical Englishman was better off than his French or German counterpart, and Burke could assure his English readers that this “slavery with all its baseness and horrors that we have at home is nothing compared to what the rest of the world affords of the same Nature.”13

      Resignation ruled. Trade and the Industrial Revolution had swelled Britain’s wealth, as the Scottish philosopher Adam Smith predicted in The Wealth of Nations in 1776. Still, even the most enlightened observers accepted that these could not trump God’s condemnation of the mass of humanity to poverty and “painful toil . . . all the days of your life.” Stations in life were ordained by the