.
The "Grand Old Man" of Chicago economics, Frank H.
Knight was one of the century's most eclectic economists. His famous
dissertation Risk, Uncertainty and Profit (1921) remains one
of the most interesting reads in economics even today. In it, Knight
made his famous distinction between "risk" (randomness with
knowable probabilities) and "uncertainty" (randomness with
unkowable probabilities), set forth the role of the entrepreneur in a
distinctive theory of profit and gave one of the earliest
presentations of the the now-famous diagrams for the theory of the
firm.
While irreducibly Neoclassical in a general sense, Knight's
peculiar economics were a direct inheritance of his Cornell professor,
Herbert J. Davenport and what was then called the "American
Psychological School" which sought to ground the Marginalist high
theory of Jevons and Wicksteed in the relativist foundations of
Thorstein Veblen's methodology.
Like Davenport, the notoriously belligerent Knight criticized
other schools on several accounts while also adopting some of their
ideas: for instance, from the Walrasians he adopted the idea of
theoretical rigor and viewing the economy in terms of multiple
markets, but disparaged their mathematical propensities; from the
Austrians he adopted their theory of alternative cost, but attacked
their theory of capital; from the Marshallians he adopted their
literary tone, but attacked their lack of rigor and their theory of
cost; from the Ricardians, he adopted a concern with the interaction
between social structure and theory but attacked the objectivist basis
of their theory; from the Marxians, he adopted many of their ideas
about the ethical critique of capitalism as well as its tendency
towards the concentration of capital, but he abhorred the labor theory
of value; from the Institutionalists, he adopted their concern with
social impact on behavior and evolution, but he opposed their
empirical techniques and conclusions.
Thus, Knight amalgamated much of what was contained all over
the spectrum of economic theory - but without once losing the
skeptic's dissecting eye. Perhaps because he was endowed with enough
of the demeanour and knowledge of a philosopher, sociologist and
historian as well as an economist, he was able to appear as a kindred
spirit to all schools as well as an opponent at the same time.
Although he is often hailed as the father of the "Chicago
School", he was always something of a loner in the early years of
that department. Knight's well-known dislike of quantitative methods
and especially empirical techniques brought him in conflict with
several colleagues - notably, the "Walrasian Trio" at
Chicago: Henry Schultz, Paul Douglas and Oskar Lange. His opposition
to the empricist propensities of the other founder of the "Chicago
School", Jacob Viner, earned him the respect but not necessarily
the friendship of Viner. Even Knight's own unlikely protegé
Henry Simons, differed substantially from Knight on matters of
substance.
Like Schumpeter (whom he both admired and resembled in many
ways), Knight was an avid proponent of a cosmopolitan laissez-faire
- but he did so on peculiar, "non-consequentialist" grounds.
As is evident in his famous "Ethics of Competition" (1923)
and in other works on ethics throughout his life, Knight does not
regard the capitalist system as ethically defensible. Capitalism, he
claims, does not produce what people want but merely creates the wants
for what it produces - "the freest individual...is in large
measure a product of the economic environment that has formed his
desires and needs, given him whatever marketable productive capacities
he has, and which largely controls his opportunities." (Knight,
1923). Furthermore, he argued that there was a tendency in market
systems towards monopoly, that the "efficiency" of markets
was misleading for there was no sense of "usefulness" of its
output to society, that the marginal productivity thesis had erroneous
ethical implications as "the income does not go to "factors"
but to their owners...and ownership of personal or material productive
capacity is based upon a complex mixture of inheritance, luck and
effort, probably in that order of relative importance" (Knight,
1923).
Knight's peculiar ethical assault on the market system and "apologetic
economics" did not diminish his penchant for laissez-faire
as a policy conclusion. The economy, he argued, is a very complex and
unstable thing. Programs of government intervention are too simplistic
and do not take into account the complexities of a market economy -
thus making interventionism even more dangerous. Laissez-faire
is recommended, he argued, not because it "works"
(for it patently does not) but rather because it holds individual
freedom as a absolute good and the opposite may be much worse.
Knight's position is quite the reverse of later Chicago School
thinkers such as Friedman -- who argued for laissez-faire
because it "works" and not because it is good in itself. In
this sense, then, Knight was perhaps too eclectic and too unique to be
singularly responsible for the quintissential ideological stance and
peculiar economics of the later of the later Chicago School of
Friedman, Stigler and company - that credit (or charge) falling mostly
upon the shoulders of Henry Simons.
Indeed, it is inconceivable that Knight could be responsible
for the economic assumptions of the Chicago school when its very
postulates (e.g. denial of the importance of monopolistic competition,
the assumption of consumer sovereignty, stable preferences, efficient
outcomes of markets, empirical-intuitive reasoning, interdisciplinary
imperialism, etc.) are precisely and directly opposed to
virtually every important argument and position of Knight's. Indeed,
the Chicago School's declared "positivist" methodology -
which Knight wryly characterized as "the emotional pronouncement
of value judgements condemning emotion and value judgements which
seems to [me] a symptom of a defective sense of humor" (Knight,
1940) - was vociferously attacked by Knight throughout his life.
However, we must grant that Knight's theories on capital (Knight
viewed all factors as capital) and his "public choice" view
of political behavior could be said to have persisted in at least some
quarters of the Chicago School.
The famously opinionated Knight used his numerous book reviews
in Chicago's Journal of Political Economy as a vehicle for his
thoughts on many subjects. As a result, he was embroiled in many
debates with the most prominent economists of his day ranging from
capital theory (versus Hayek, Mises and the Austrians, e.g. 1933,
1935, 1937) to welfare theory (versus Pigou, e.g. 1924), from his
attack on Keynes (1937) to methodology (versus Hutchison (1940)). He
carved a unique path in economics - being claimed by many schools of
thought as one of their own, without really belonging to any. His
contributions on the methodology and philosophy of economics remain as
fresh and controversial today as in his time.
Major Works of Frank H. Knight
- "The Concept of Normal Price in Value and Distribution",
1917, QJE.
- Risk, Uncertainty and Profit, 1921.
- "Cost of Production and Price Over Long and Short
Periods", 1921, JPE.
- " Cassel's Theoretische Sozialökonomie",
1921, JPE.
- "Ethics
and the Economic Interpretation," 1922, QJE.
- "
The Ethics of Competition," 1923, QJE.
- "Some Fallacies in the Interpretation of Social Cost",
1924, QJE.
- "The Limitations of Scientific Method in Economics",
1924, in Tugwell, editor, Trend of Economics.
- "A Note on Professor Clark's Illustration of Marginal
Productivity", 1925, JPE.
- "Economic Psychology and the Value Problem", 1925,
QJE.
- "Economics at its Best: Review of Pigou", 1926,
AER.
- "Historical and Theoretical Issues in the Problem of
Modern Capitalism", 1928, Journal of Econ & Business
History.
- "A Suggestion for Simplifying the Statement of the
General Theory of Price", 1928, JPE.
- "Freedom as Fact and Criterion", 1929, Int J
of Ethics
- "Statics and Dynamics: Some queries regarding the
mechanical analogy in economics", 1930, ZfN.
- "Professor Fisher's Interest Theory: A case in point",
1931, JPE.
- "Modern Economic Society Further Considered",
1932, JPE.
- The Economic Organisation, 1933.
- "Capitalistic Production, Time and the Rate of Return",
1933, in Essays in Honor of Gustav Cassel.
- "The Nature of Economic Science in Some Recent
Discussion", 1934, AER.
- "Social Science and the Political Trend", 1934,
Univ of Toronto Quarterly
- "Common-Sense of Political Economy: Wicksteed Reprinted",
1934, JPE.
- The Ethics of Competitition and Other Essays, 1935.
- "The Ricardian Theory of Production and Distribution",
1935, Canadian JE.
- "A Comment on Machlup", 1935, JPE.
- "Professor Hayek and the Theory of Investment",
1935, EJ.
- "The Theory of Investment Once More: Mr. Boulding and
the Austrians", 1935, QJE.
- "Some Issues in the Economics of Stationary States",
1936, AER.
- "The Place of Marginal Economics in a Collectivist
System", 1936, AER.
- "The Quantity of Capital and the Rate of Interest",
1936, JPE. -
See
review by Ross Emmett
- "Pragmatism and Social Action: Review of Dewey",
1936, Int J of Ethics
- "Note on Dr. Lange's Interest Theory", 1937, RES.
- "Unemployment: and Mr. Keynes's revolution in economic
theory", 1937, Canadian JE.
- "On the Theory of Capital: In reply to Mr. Kaldor",
1938, Econometrica.
- "The Ethics of Liberalism", 1939, Economica.
- "Socialism: The nature of the problem", 1940, Ethics
- "`What is Truth' in Economics", 1940, JPE.
- "The Significance and Basic Postulates of Economics: a
rejoinder", 1941, JPE
- "Religion and Ethics in Modern Civilization",
1941, J of Liberal Religion
- "The Meaning of Democracy: its politico-economic
structure and ideals", 1941, J of Negro Education
- "Social Science", 1941, Ethics.
- "The Business Cycle, Interest and Money: A
methodological approach", 1941, REStat.
- "Professor Mises and the Theory of Capital", 1941,
Economica.
- "The Role of the Individual in the Economic World of
the Future", 1941, JPE.
- "Science, Philosophy and Social Procedure", 1942,
Ethics
- "Fact and Value in Social Science", 1942, in
Anshen, editor, Science and Man
- "Some Notes on the Economic Interpretation of History",
1942, Studies in the History of Culture.
- "Social Causation", 1943, American Journal of
Sociology.
- "Diminishing Returns Under Investment", 1944, JPE.
- "Realism and Relevance in the Theory of Demand",
1944, JPE.
- "The Rights of Man and Natural Law", 1944, Ethics
- "Human Nature and World Democracy", 1944, American
J of Sociology.
- "Economics, Political Science and Education",
1944, AER
- The Economic Order and Religion, with T.W. Merriam,
1945.
- "Immutable Law in Economics: Its reality and
limitations", 1946, AER.
- "The Sickness of Liberal Society", 1946, Ethics
- "Salvation by Science: The gospel according to
Professor Lundberg", 1947, JPE.
- Freedom and Reform: Essays in economics and social
philosophy, 1947.
- "Free Society: Its basic nature and problem",
1948, Philosophical Review.
- "The Role of Principles in Economics and Politics",
1951, AER.
- " Institutionalism and Empiricism in Economics",
1952, AER.
- On the History and Methods of Economics: Selected essays,
1956.
- Intelligence and Democratic Action, 1960.
- "Methodology in Economics", 1961, Southern EJ
- "Abstract Economics as Absolute Ethics", 1966,
Ethics.
- "Laissez Faire: Pro and con", 1967, JPE.
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