The Canadian-born, Berkeley-trained John Kenneth Galbraith has
been considered by many as the "Last American Institutionalist".
As a result, Galbraith has remained something of a renegade in modern
economics - and his work has been nothing if not provocative.
In the 1950s, he presented economics with two tracts that
needled the mainstream: one developing a theory of price control
(which arose out of his wartime experience in the Office of Price
Administration) which he argued for as an anti-inflation policy
(1952); the second, American Capitalism (1952), which argued
that American post-war success arose not out of "getting the
prices right" in an orthodox sense, but rather of "getting
the prices wrong" and allowing industrial concentration to
develop. It is a formula for growth because it enables technical
innovation which might otherwise not been done. However, it can only
be regarded as successful provided there is a "countervailing
power" against potential abuse in the form of trade unions,
supplier and consumer organizations and government regulation.
Many have since argued the formula for East Asian success later
in the century was based precisely on this combination of
oligopolistic power and "countervailing" institutions. It
was his smallish 1958 book, The Affluent Society, that earned
Galbraith his popular reknown and professional emnity. Although the
thesis was not astoundingly new - having long been argued by Veblen,
Mitchell and Knight - his attack on the concept of "consumer
sovereignty" went against the cornerstone of mainstream economics
and, in many ways, the culturally hegemonic "American way of life".
His New Industrial State (1967) expanded on Galbraith's
theory of the firm, arguing that the orthodox theories of the
perfectly competitive firm fell far short in analytical power. Firms,
Galbraith claimed, were oligopolistic, autonomous institutions vying
for market share (and not profit maximization) which wrested power
away from owners (entrepreneurs/shareholders), regulators and
consumers via conventional means (e.g. vertical integration,
advertising, product differentiation) and unconventional ones (e.g.
bureaucratization, capture of political favor), etc. Naturally, these
were themes already well-espoused in the old American Institutionalist
literature, but in the 1960s, they had been apparently forgotten in
economics.
The issue of "political capture" by firms was expanded
upon in his 1973 Economics and the Public Purpose. But new
themes were added - notably, that of public education, the political
process and stressing the provision of public goods. Although often
not acknowledging it explicitly, many economists have since pursued
themes raised by Galbraith. The issue of political capture has been
followed up by Buchanan and "Public Choice" Austrians, the
objectives and conduct of the firm by Simon and the "New
Institutionalist" schools, the failure of consumer sovereignty by
Scitovsky and others. Even the game- theoretic developments in
industrial organization have replayed Galbraithian themes.
Nonetheless, Galbraith has been dismissed by much of the mainstream -
although that did not prevent them from electing him president of the
AEA in 1972!
Galbraith certainly remains one of the better-known economists
in post-war America and has worked in various sectors of the economy.
Besides his work at Harvard and the Office of Price Administration,
Galbraith was editor of Fortune magazine for several years, director
of the US Strategic Bombing Survey, chairman of the Americans for
Democratic Action in the late 1960s, television and newspaper
commentator, advisor and speechwriter for John Fitzgerald Kennedy,
Eugene McCarthy and George McGovern. He also served as the American
ambassador to India in the early 1960s and tried his hand at two
novels (1968, 1990).
Major works of John Kenneth Galbraith
- Modern Competition and Business Policy, 1938.
- A Theory of Price Control, 1952.
- American Capitalism: The concept of countervailing power,
1952.
- The Great Crash, 1929, 1954.
- The Affluent Society, 1958.
- The Liberal Hour, 1960
- The New Industrial State, 1967.
- The Triumph, 1968.
- Ambassador's Journal, 1969.
- Economics, Peace and Laughter, 1972.
- "Power and the Useful Economist", 1973, AER
- Economics and the Public Purpose, 1973
- Money, 1975.
- The Age of Uncertainty, 1977.
- Annals of an Abiding LIberal, 1979.
- A Life in Our Times, 1981.
- The Tenured Professor, 1990.
- A Journey Through Economic Time, 1994.
- The Good Society: the humane agenda, 1996.