A product of the waning years of the Austro-Hungarian Empire,
Joseph A. Schumpeter exemplified that heritage. Although a student
of Eugen von Bohm-Bawerk and Friedrich von Wieser, Schumpeter was
never really a footsoldier of the Austrian School. After a quick
doctorate at Vienna, Schumpeter roamed about as something of a
footloose lawyer until he rejoined academia in 1909.
It was while he was teaching at Czernowitz (now in the Ukraine)
that he wrote his Theory of Economic Development (1911),
where he first outlined his famous theory of entrepreneurship. He
argued those daring spirits, entrepreneurs, created technical and
financial innovations in the face of competition and falling profits
- and that it was these spurts of activity which generated
(irregular) economic growth.
His second book (1914) he finished while at Graz when World War I
broke out - which Schumpeter opposed. After the war, Schumpeter
joined the German Socialization Committee in Berlin - which then was
composed of several Marxian scholars (such as Hilferding and
Kautsky) and other economists (such as Lowe, Lederer and Heimann)
who later joined the New School.
In 1919, Schumpeter became the Austrian Minister of Finance -
unfortuantely, presiding over the hyperinflation of the period, and
thus was dismissed later that year.
After a brief teaching stint at Graz, Schumpeter migrated in 1921
to the private sector and became the president of a small Viennese
banking house. Ill luck dogged him: his bank collapsed in 1924. He
drifted once again back into academia - taking up a teaching
position at Bonn in 1925.
In 1932, Schumpeter took up a position at Harvard, succeeding the
Marshallian F.W. Taussig. He was soon joined later by Alvin Hansen,
Wassily Leontief, Paul Sweezy, John Kenneth Galbraith and fellow
Austrian, Gottfried Haberler. Schumpeter ruled Harvard during the
period of the "charmed generation" - when Samuelson,
Tobin, Goodwin, Tsuru, Heilbroner, Bergson, Metzler, etc. were his
students. Although excelling as a teacher above everything, Joseph
Schumpeter nonetheless completed three more books while at Harvard:
his didactic Business Cycles(1939), his popular Capitalism,
Socialism and Democracy (1942) - in which he famously predicted
the downfall of capitalism in the hands of intellectuals - and his
encyclopedic, History of Economic Analysis (1954).
In the first two, he expanded upon his theory of entrepreneurship
and into a wider theory of the development of capitalism,
integrating it into a business cycle theory and a theory
socio-economic evolution. See the accompanying review of
Schumpeter's theory of growth.
Schumpeter's legacy is difficult to assess. Although an enthusiast
of Walras and the Lausanne School, he contributed little to it
beyond praise. Although he had contributed to the Methodenstreit
against the German Historicists and on behalf of Menger, the other
Austrians had long written him off as one of the faithful - and his
old Marxian comrades of Berlin and Vienna certainly did not regard
this man with conservative instincts as a fellow traveler. Like
Frank Knight, Schumpeter remains unclassifiable in this schema.
Consequently, we give him the honor of founding "evolutionary"
economics, given his concern with economic change brought about by
the interaction between individuals and the economy as a whole, a
concern with socio-economic history and institutions, but not enough
to overshadow his search for an inherently theoretical explanation
for the development of capitalism.