The Austrian-born Arthur F. Burns was the prominent and influential
Chairmen of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System from
1970 to 1978. He had previously served as the chair of the President
Eisenhower's Council of Economic Advisors from 1953 to 1956, where he
developed a influential relationship with Richard Nixon - who made him
his counsellor in 1969 and subsequently appointed him Chairman of the
Federal Reserve in 1970. Later on, he took a position at the American
Enterprise Insitute, served as an advisor to Ronald Reagan and was
appointed American ambassador to West Germany.
Burns's remarkable conservative connections did not, however,
prevent him from being almost a "liberal" in practice. He
was behind most of the demand management during the Eisenhower
administration and, later during the Nixon reign, Burns was a constant
advocate of incomes policies and eschewed strict rules in the conduct
of monetary policy. It was Burns that effectively undertook the "stop-go"
monetary policy of the 1970s which later led him to be succeeded by
the ferociously monetarist Paul Volcker in 1978. In economics,
however, Arthur Burns is most associated with the business cycle vein
of the American Institutionalist school.
A student of Wesley Mitchell, Burns co-authored the famous NBER
study, the massive Measuring Business Cycles (1946), with Mitchell,
one of the most definitive empirical works of the century. Burns
stayed on at Columbia and the NBER, where he counted Milton Friedman
and George Stigler as his students - a remarkable coincidence given
that although both of them retained an apparently deep affection for
their old professor, their sometimes vituperative criticisms of the
Federal Reserve in the 1970s were very much directed at Burns.
Information on Arthur Burns
Major Works of Arthur F. Burns
- Production Trends in the United States since 1870, 1934.
- Measuring Business Cycles, with W.C. Mitchell, 1946.
- Frontiers of Economic Knowledge, 1954.
- Prosperity without Inflation, 1957.
- The Business Cycle in a Changing World, 1969.
- Reflections of an Economic Policy Maker, 1978.