Albert O. Hirschman Explained

Albert Otto Hirschman
Birth Date:7 April 1915
Birth Place:Berlin, German Empire
Death Place:Ewing Township, New Jersey, United States
Institutions:
Field:Political economy
Alma Mater:University of Trieste
London School of Economics
University of Paris
HEC Paris
Contributions:Hiding hand principle
Repec Prefix:e
Repec Id:phi153

Albert Otto Hirschman[1] (born Otto-Albert Hirschmann; April 7, 1915 – December 10, 2012) was a German economist and the author of several books on political economy and political ideology. His first major contribution was in the area of development economics.[2] Here he emphasized the need for unbalanced growth. He argued that disequilibria should be encouraged to stimulate growth and help mobilize resources, because developing countries are short of decision-making skills. Key to this was encouraging industries with many linkages to other firms.

His later work was in political economy and there he advanced two schemata. The first describes the three basic possible responses to decline in firms or polities (quitting, speaking up, staying quiet) in Exit, Voice, and Loyalty (1970).[3] The second describes the basic arguments made by conservatives (perversity, futility and jeopardy) in The Rhetoric of Reaction (1991).

In World War II, he played a key role in rescuing refugees in occupied France.[4]

Early life and education

Otto Albert Hirschman was born in 1915 into an affluent Jewish family in Berlin, Germany, the son of Carl Hirschmann, a surgeon,[5] and Hedwig Marcuse Hirschmann. He had a sister, Ursula Hirschmann.[6] In 1932, he started studying at Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität, where he was active in the anti-fascist resistance. He emigrated to Paris,[7] where he continued his studies at HEC Paris and the Sorbonne. Then he was off to the London School of Economics and the University of Trieste, where he received his doctorate in economics in 1938.[6]

However, he had taken one break in the summer of 1936 to spend three months as a volunteer fighting on behalf of the Spanish Republic in the Spanish Civil War.[5] This experience helped him when, after France’s 1940 surrender to the Nazis during World War II, he worked with Varian Fry from the Emergency Rescue Committee to help many of Europe's leading artists and intellectuals escape from occupied France to Spain through paths in the Pyrenees Mountains and then to Portugal,[5] [8] with their exodus to end in the United States.[5] Those rescued included Marc Chagall, Hannah Arendt, and Marcel Duchamp. Hirschman's participation in these rescues are one aspect of the 2023 Netflix series Transatlantic, in which a fictionalized version of him is played by Lucas Englander.[9]

Life and Career

From 1941 to 1943 he was a Rockefeller Fellow at the University of California, Berkeley. From 1943 to 1946 he was in the United States Army, where he worked in the Office of Strategic Services (the forerunner of the CIA). Among his tasks was serving as the interpreter for German general Anton Dostler at an early Allied war crimes trial.[10] [11]

He was chief of the Western European and British Commonwealth Section of the Federal Reserve Board from 1946 to 1952.[12] In this role, he conducted and published analyses of postwar European reconstruction and newly created international economic institutions. From 1952 to 1954 he was a financial advisor to the National Planning Board of Colombia; he stayed in Bogotá for another 2 years and worked as a private economic counselor.

Thereafter he held a succession of academic appointments in the economics departments of Yale University (1956–58), Columbia University (1958-64), and Harvard University (1964–74). He was on the Faculty of Social Science of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton from 1974 to 2012 until his death.

He died at the age of 97 on December 10, 2012, just months after the passing of his wife of over 70 years, Sarah Hirschman (née Chapiro).[13]

Work

His first major contribution was in the area of development economics with the 1958 book The Strategy of Economic Development. Here he emphasized the need for unbalanced growth. He argued that disequilibria should be encouraged to stimulate growth and help mobilize resources, because developing countries are short of decision-making skills. Key to this was encouraging industries with many linkages to other firms. He argued against "Big Push" approaches to development, such as those advocated by Paul Rosenstein-Rodan.[14]

In the 1960s, Hirschman praised the works of Peruvian intellectuals José Carlos Mariátegui and Víctor Raúl Haya de la Torre, stating "paradoxically, the most ambitious attempt to theorize the revolution of Latin American society arose in a country that to date has experienced very little social change: I am talking about Peru and the writings of Haya de la Torre and Mariátegui".[15] He helped develop the hiding hand principle in his 1967 essay The principle of the hiding hand,.

His later work was in political economy, where he advanced two schemata. In Exit, Voice, and Loyalty (1970) he described the three basic possible responses to decline in firms or polities (quitting, speaking up, staying quiet). The second systematizes the basic arguments made by conservatives (perversity, futility and jeopardy) in The Rhetoric of Reaction (1991).

In The Passions and the Interests Hirschmann recounts a history of the ideas laying the intellectual groundwork for capitalism. He describes how thinkers in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries embraced the sin of avarice as an important counterweight to humankind's destructive passions. Capitalism was promoted by thinkers including Montesquieu, Sir James Steuart, and Adam Smith as repressing the passions for "harmless" commercial activities. Hirschman noted that terms including "vice" and "passion" gave way to "such bland terms" as "advantage" and "interest." Hirschman described it as the book he most enjoyed writing. According to Hirschman biographer Jeremy Adelman, it reflected Hirschman's political moderation, a challenge to reductive accounts of human nature by economists as a "utility-maximizing machine" as well as Marxian or communitarian "nostalgia for a world that was lost to consumer avarice."[16]

Herfindahl–Hirschman Index

In 1945, Hirschman proposed a market concentration index which was the square root of the sum of the squares of the market share of each participant in the market. In 1950, Orris C. Herfindahl proposed a similar index (but without the square root), apparently unaware of the prior work. Thus, it is usually referred to as the Herfindahl–Hirschman Index.

Books

Selected articles

Awards

Hirschman was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1965),[18] the American Philosophical Society (1979),[19] and the United States National Academy of Sciences (1987).[20]

In 2001, Hirschman was named among the top 100 American intellectuals, as measured by academic citations, in Richard Posner's book, Public Intellectuals: A Study of Decline.[21]

In 2002, Hirschman was awarded Doctor Honoris Causa by the European University Institute, Florence, Italy.[22]

In 2003, he won the Benjamin E. Lippincott Award from the American Political Science Association to recognize a work of exceptional quality by a living political theorist for his book The Passions and the Interests: Political Arguments for Capitalism before Its Triumph.

In 2007, the Social Science Research Council established an annual prize in honor of Hirschman.[23]

See also

References

Citations
  • Sources
  • Further reading

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. or Hirshman.
    2. Hirschman, A. O. (1958) The Strategy of Economic Development. Yale University Press
    3. Dowding. Keith. March 26, 2015. Albert O. Hirschman, Exit, Voice and Loyalty: Responses to Decline in Firms, Organizations, and States. The Oxford Handbook of Classics in Public Policy and Administration. en. 10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199646135.013.30. 978-0-19-964613-5. Lodge. Martin. Page. Edward C. Balla. Steven J. February 1, 2020. February 2, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200202015650/https://www.oxfordhandbooks.com/view/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199646135.001.0001/oxfordhb-9780199646135-e-30. live.
    4. Web site: Kuttner . Robert . 2013-05-16 . Rediscovering Albert Hirschman . 2023-02-23 . The American Prospect . en-us.
    5. http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2013/06/24/130624crbo_books_gladwell?currentPage=all Book review of “Worldly Philosopher: The Odyssey of Albert O. Hirschman” (Princeton), by Jeremy Adelman : The Gift of Doubt: Albert O. Hirschman and the power of failure by Malcolm Gladwell
    6. Honorary degree awarded to Albert O. Hirschman by Free University of Berlin
    7. Löhr. Isabella. January 15, 2014. Jeremy Adelman, Worldly Philosopher. The Odyssey of Albert O. Hirschman. Princeton/Oxford, Princeton University Press 2013. Historische Zeitschrift. 299. 2. 573–576. 10.1515/hzhz-2014-0531. 2196-680X.
    8. News: Yardley. William. December 23, 2012. Albert Hirschman, Optimistic Economist, Dies at 97. en-US. The New York Times. 2021-06-06. 0362-4331. October 10, 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161010072005/http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/24/business/albert-o-hirschman-economist-and-resistance-figure-dies-at-97.html. live.
    9. Web site: Meet Lucas Englander, the 'Chameleon' of Transatlantic. April 10, 2023. The Hollywood Reporter. Scott. Roxborough. en. April 10, 2023. April 10, 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230410080544/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/lucas-englander-transatlantic-interview-netflix-1235363888/. live.
    10. News: Albert Hirschman, Optimistic Economist, Dies at 97 . Yardley . William . The New York Times . December 23, 2012 . July 23, 2013 . April 29, 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130429130600/http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/24/business/albert-o-hirschman-economist-and-resistance-figure-dies-at-97.html . live .
    11. Book: Adelman, Jeremy.. Worldly philosopher : the odyssey of Albert O. Hirschman. 2013. 978-0-691-15567-8. Princeton, NJ. 820123478.
    12. Alacevich . Michele . Asso . Pier Francesco . 2022 . Albert O. Hirschman, Europe, and the Postwar Economic Order, 1946–52 . History of Political Economy . 55 . 39–75 . 10.1215/00182702-10213625 . 252975953 . 0018-2702. 11585/914215 . free .
    13. News: Economist who studied progress and fought fascism dies . Green . David . . October 12, 2014 . January 6, 2015 . January 6, 2015 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150106122918/http://www.haaretz.com/cmlink/2.576/.premium-1.630796 . live .
    14. Book: Paul., Krugman. Development, geography, and economic theory. 1999. MIT Press. 0-262-61135-X. 742205196.
    15. Orihuela. José Carlos. January–June 2020. El consenso de Lima y sus descontentos: del restringido desarrollismo oligarca a revolucionarias reformas estructurales. Revista de historia. Concepción, Chile. 27. 1. 77–100. February 23, 2022. February 23, 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220223034835/https://scielo.conicyt.cl/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&pid=S0717-88322020000100077&lng=en&nrm=iso. live.
    16. Book: Adelman, Jeremy . Worldly Philosopher: The Odyssey of Albert O. Hirschman . Jeremy Adelman . Princeton University Press . April 7, 2013 . 978-0691155678.
    17. Book: Albert O. Hirschman. National Power and the Structure of Foreign Trade. registration. January 1, 1980. University of California Press. 978-0-520-04082-3. ...there was a posterior inventor, O. C. Herfindahl, who proposed the same index, except for the square root.... 19.
    18. Web site: Albert Otto Hirschman . 2022-06-23 . American Academy of Arts & Sciences . en . June 23, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220623184320/https://www.amacad.org/person/albert-otto-hirschman . live .
    19. Web site: APS Member History . 2022-06-23 . search.amphilsoc.org.
    20. Web site: Albert O. Hirschman . 2022-06-23 . nasonline.org . June 23, 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220623184320/http://www.nasonline.org/member-directory/deceased-members/15527.html . live .
    21. Book: Posner, Richard. Public Intellectuals: A Study of Decline. 2001. Harvard University Press. 978-0-674-00633-1.
    22. Web site: European University Institute (EUI) . Doctor Honoris Causa of the EUI and Recipients of Doctor Honoris Causa Degrees . 24 November 2023.
    23. Web site: Albert O. Hirschman Prize of the Social Science Research Council . Social Science Research Council . July 23, 2013 . June 10, 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160610132637/http://www.ssrc.org/hirschman/ . dead .