Alfred Müller-Armack
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Alfred Müller-Armack | |
---|---|
Born | 28 June 1901 |
Died | 16 March 1978 |
Nationality | German |
Academic career | |
School or tradition | Ordoliberalism |
Alfred Müller-Armack (28 June 1901 – 16 March 1978) was a German economist and politician.
He was professor of economics at University of Münster and University of Cologne. Müller-Armack coined the term "social market economy" in 1946.
Müller-Armack was a central figure of the "Cologne school." He always pointed out that the economy had to serve humanity. A regulatory environment should provide the basis for a form of competition that was to the best for all people.
In 1933 he published a book in praise of Nazism, entitled Ideas of the State and Economy Order in the New Reich. He worked as an advisor to the Nazi regime and the German army, and contributed to discussions about the post-war economic order. (Werner Bonefeld, The Strong State and the Free Economy, 2017, pg. 10.
After 1952, he worked in the economic ministry under Ludwig Erhard (CDU) as section chief of the newly founded policy department (Grundsatzabteilung).
References
- Dietzfelbinger, Daniel (2000). "Von der Religionssoziologie zur Sozialen Marktwirtschaft: Leben und Werk Alfred Müller-Armacks (On the sociology of religion in the social market economy: the life and work of Alfred Müller-Armack)". Politische Studien (in German). 51 (373). Hanns-Seidel-Stiftung (Hanns Seidel Foundation): 85–99.
- 1901 births
- 1978 deaths
- People from Essen
- German economists
- University of Cologne faculty
- Grand Crosses with Star and Sash of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
- University of Münster faculty
- 20th-century economists
- European economist stubs
- German academic biography stubs
- German politician stubs