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Mark Blaug

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Mark Blaug
FBA
Born
Norbert Blauaug

3 April 1927
The Hague, Netherlands
Died18 November 2011(2011-11-18) (aged 84)
Peter Tavy, Devon, United Kingdom
NationalityBritish (naturalised 1982)
Academic career
FieldEconomist
InstitutionUniversity of Buckingham
Alma materColumbia University
InfluencesGeorge Stigler
AwardsFellow of the British Academy (FBA)

Mark Blaug FBA (/blɔːɡ/;[1] 3 April 1927 – 18 November 2011) was a Dutch-born British economist (naturalised in 1982), who covered a broad range of topics during his long career.[2]

He was married to Ruth Towse.

Life and work

Blaug was born on 3 April 1927 in The Hague as Norbert Blauaug.[3] In 1955 Blaug received his PhD from Columbia University in New York under the supervision of George Stigler. Besides shorter periods in public service and in international organisations he has held academic appointments in – among others – Yale University, the University of London, the London School of Economics, the University of Exeter and the University of Buckingham. He was visiting professor in the Netherlands, University of Amsterdam and Erasmus University in Rotterdam, where he was also co-director of CHIMES (Center for History in Management and Economics).

Mark Blaug made far reaching contributions to a range of topics in economic thought throughout his career. Apart from valuable contributions to the economics of art and the economics of education, he is best known for his work in history of economic thought and the methodology of economics. Concerning methodological issues and the application of economic theory to a wide range of subjects from education to human capital, the "philosophy of science and the sweep of intellectual progress are fitting subjects to accommodate the breadth of Mark Blaug's interest."[4]

He died on 18 November 2011 in Peter Tavy, Devon.[5]

Selected quotations

‘Cambridge theories of value and distribution themselves suffer from the very malady which they hope to cure: rhetoric apart, they are deeply infected by static, equilibrium analysis of maximizing economic agents, acting with full information in a world of perfect certainty, as in the orthodoxy they deplore. … If there is something wrong with neo-classical economics – as there may well be – the Cambridge theories share all of its weaknesses and practically none of its strengths.’ (Blaug, 1974, pp. 3, 69)

Joan Robinson’s much-awaited textbook in “modern economics” perfectly exemplifies the typical attitude of Cambridge economists to micro-economics. The whole of traditional price theory is covered in one chapter … [some] prices are formed by conventional mark-ups on prime costs, the level of the mark-up itself being left unexplained. Apart from this chapter, the book is doggedly macro-economic in treatment … A striking omission from the book is any mention of the closely related concepts of externalities and public goods, which most economists would nowadays regard as the basic ingredients of “market failure” that has come to be fruitfully applied … to problems of pollution and congestion.’ (Blaug, 1974, pp. 71-2)

‘Nothing is more difficult than to turn and entire discipline around, asking itself to jettison its own history over the last 200 years.’ Blaug (1990, p. 205).

‘Despite entries on socialism, socialist economics and market socialism, and biographical entries on Oskar Lange and Ludwig von Mises, the Socialist Calculation Debate, so crucial in the revival of general equilibrium theory and the rise of modern welfare economics in the 1930s, is nowhere discussed at length in The New Palgrave.’ Blaug (1990, p. 236).

‘The history of economic thought is irrepressible. It would survive even if it were banned … it would be carried on in secret in underground organizations. Many economists denigrate the history of economics as mere antiquarianism but, in fact, they have deluded ideas about the history of their own subject. After all, whenever anyone has a new idea in economics, whenever anyone hankers to start a new movement or school of thought, what is the first thing he or she does? Why, it is to rummage the attic of past ideas to establish an appropriate pedigree for the new departure. … Smith, Ricardo, Marx, Marshall and Keynes all drew on the history of economics to show that they had predecessors and forerunners; even Milton Friedman, when he launched the monetarist counterrevolution against Keynes, could not resist the temptation to quote David Hume over and again. The history of economic thought cannot be abolished and, were its study declared illegal, it would be studied in basements behind locked doors.’ (‘Introduction’, to Blaug, M. (ed.) (1991) The Historiography of Economics (Aldershot: Edward Elgar), p. x.)

‘Modern Austrian economists go so far as to suggest that the Walrasian approach to the problem of multimarket equilibrium is a cul de sac: if we want to understand the process of competition, rather than the equilibrium end-state achieved by competition, we must begin by discarding such static reasoning as is implied by Walrasian GE theory. I have come slowly and extremely reluctantly to the view that they are right and that we have all been wrong’ Mark Blaug (1991, pg. 508)

‘The Lange idea of managers following marginal cost-pricing rules because they are instructed to do so, while the central planning board continually alters the prices of both producer and consumer goods so as to reduce their excess demands to zero, is so administratively naive as to be positively laughable. Only those drunk on perfectly competitive, static equilibrium theory could have swallowed such nonsense. ... in all the recent calls for reform of Soviet bloc economies, no one has ever suggested that Lange was of any relevance whatsoever. And still more ironically, Lange’s “market socialism” is, on its own grounds, socialism without anything that can be called market transactions.’ Mark Blaug (1993) Review of David R. Steele From Marx to Mises, in Economic Journal, 103(6), November, p. 1571.

‘Modern economics is “sick”. Economics has increasingly become an intellectual game played for its own sake and not for its practical consequences. Economists have gradually converted the subject into a sort of social mathematics in which analytical rigor as understood in math departments is everything and empirical relevance (as understood in physics departments) is nothing. If a topic cannot be tackled by formal modelling, it is simply consigned to the intellectual underworld. To pick up a copy of American Economic Review or Economic Journal, not to mention Econometrica or Review of Economic Studies these days is to wonder whether one has landed on a strange planet in which tedium is the deliberate objective of professional publication. Economics was condemned a century ago as “the dismal science”, but the dismal science of yesterday was a lot less dismal than the soporific scholasticism of today.’ Blaug (1998, p. 12)

Honours

Selected publications

Books

  • Blaug, Mark (1958). Ricardian economics: a historical study (volume 8 of Yale studies in economics) (1st ed.). New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press.
Reprinted as: Blaug, Mark (2012). Ricardian economics: a historical study (volume 8 of Yale studies in economics). Whitefish, MT: Literary Licensing, LLC. ISBN 9781258447861.
Review: Spiegel, Henry W. (January 1959). "Ricardian economics: a historical study (book review)". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 321 (1): 197–198. doi:10.1177/000271625932100176. S2CID 145396784.
  • Blaug, Mark (1962). Economic theory in retrospect (1st ed.). Cambridge New York: Cambridge University Press.
Revised as: Blaug, Mark (1997). Economic theory in retrospect (5th ed.). Cambridge New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521577014 – via Internet Archive.
Preview.
  • Blaug, Mark (1974). The Cambridge Revolution: Success or Failure? (1st ed.). London: Institute of Economic Affairs. ISBN 9780255360623.
  • Blaug, Mark (1980). The methodology of economics, or, How economists explain. Cambridge England New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521294379.
Revised as: Blaug, Mark (1992). The methodology of economics, or, how economists explain. Cambridge New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521436786 – via Internet Archive.
Preview.
  • Blaug, Mark (1985). Great economists since Keynes: an introduction to the lives & works of one hundred modern economists. Brighton: Wheatsheaf. ISBN 9781858986920.
Revised as: Blaug, Mark (1998). Great economists since Keynes: an introduction to the lives & works of one hundred modern economists (2nd ed.). Cheltenham, Glos, UK; Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar – via Internet Archive.

Chapters in books

  • Sen, Amartya (2012), "Development as capability expansion", in Saegert, Susan; DeFilippis, James (eds.), The community development reader, New York: Routledge, ISBN 9780415507769
  • Blaug, Mark (2005), "The social sciences: economics (volume 27)", in Goetz, Philip W.; MacHenry, Robert; Hoiberg, Dale H. (eds.), The New Encyclopædia Britannica (15th ed.), Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, pp. 343–352, ISBN 9781593392369

Journal articles

Also available at JSTOR: link.

Anthologies

  • 'Pioneers in Economics'. In 1991 and 1992 Blaug edited a series of fifty volumes, with reprints of journal articles on the history of economic thought, under the series title 'Pioneers in Economics'. The series was published by Edward Elgar Publishing.[7][8]

References

  1. ^ A Conversation With Mark Blaug
  2. ^ "Weekly Philo economics: Mark Blaug (1927–2011) – New APPS: Art, Politics, Philosophy, Science". Newappsblog.com. Retrieved 25 November 2011.
  3. ^ a b A. Heertje. "Mark Blaug - Levensbericht". Levensberichten en Herdenkingen 2017 (in Dutch). Koninklijke Nederlandse Akademie van Wetenschappen.
  4. ^ The University of Buckingham (2007). Professor Mark Blaug. Author. Archived from the original on 23 June 2007.
  5. ^ a b Denis O'Brien. "Mark Blaug 1927–2011" (PDF). British Academy. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 October 2020.
  6. ^ "Who's Who in Economics, Fourth Edition". www.e-elgar.com. Retrieved 2 May 2022.
  7. ^ For an overview of the 'Pioneers in Economics' series, see: this page on the website of Edgar Elgar.
  8. ^ Backhouse, Roger E. (September 1993). "Portrait of a Discipline? Mark Blaug's Pioneers in Economics. A Review Article". The Manchester School. LXI (3): 302–313. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9957.1993.tb00238.x.(subscription required)

Further reading