Joseph Schumpeter died in 1950, a few weeks before his sixty-seventh
birthday, and since then, his reputation as a sage has been
appreciating almost constantly, at least outside of economics.
First there was Robert Heilbroner's The Worldly Philosophers:
The Lives, Times and Ideas of the Great Economic Thinkers. When the book appeared in 1953, Schumpeter had the
last chapter to himself, with Heilbroner amplifying the economist's
famous 1942 judgment, in Capitalism, Socialism and
Democracy: "Can capitalism survive? No. I do not think
it can." John Kenneth Galbraith elaborated the Schumpeterian
view that the future would consist mainly of bureaucratic
planning and administration with The New Industrial
State in 1967.
In the 1960s, too, historian Alfred D. Chandler Jr. published
Strategy and Structure: Chapters in the History of the
American Industrial Enterprise.
His masterly case studies of the rise of General Motors, Dupont,
Standard Oil and Sears, Roebuck mentioned Schumpeter once
in passing, but the angle of vision was unmistakably the same.
Harvard Business School soon called Chandler to teach, and
there he turned out such classics of business history as The
Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business
and Scale and Scope.
Harvard sociologist Daniel Bell took up the cudgels next,
with The Coming of Post-Industrial Society. In Shifting Involvements: Private
Interests and Public Action, Albert Hirschman, of the Institute for Advanced Study, in Princeton,
gave him a sly boost as well
On the centenary of Schumpeter's birth, business guru Peter
Drucker wrote him up as being essentially superior to Keynes,
in a widely-remarked cover story in Forbes
magazine. Both men had been born in 1883, Drucker noted; a
hundred years later, Schumpeter, with his emphasis on an innovating,
ever-changing economy, had turned out to be right, he argued;
it was the stagnationist Keynes who got his ultimate diagnosis
wrong. A scholarly biography by economic sociologist
Richard Swedberg followed in 1991.
Now, nearly 60 years after his death, a full-bore biography
by a professional historian has arrived, tending to endorse
Drucker's earlier judgment and to expand upon it considerably.
Prophet
of Innovation: Joseph Schumpeter and Creative Destruction,
by Thomas C. McCraw, rescues the great man from playground
battles over the role of the public sector in either slackening
or quickening the rate of economic growth (or both) and places
him on a plane where he truly can be compared as a public
figure to his rival. Robert Skidelsky's three-volume biography
of Keynes (Hopes Betrayed,
The Economist as Savior, Fighting for Freedom) tips the scale at close to ten pounds and some two
thousand pages. But McCraw, with nearly 700 pages of his own,
makes a plausible case that the Austrian savant was in touch
with some pretty ultimate truths, too.
There are at several reasons this book will be widely read.
McCraw, winner of a Pulitzer Prize for his 1984 book, Prophets
of Regulation: Charles Francis Adam, Louis D. Brandeis, James
M. Landis and Alfred E. Kahn, frames his narrative confidently and writes beautifully, with all the
charm and assurance of a celebrated lecturer at the Harvard
Business School whose courses in business history have been
among the schools most popular electives for many years. The
ample resources of the Harvard University Press are behind
the book as well.
And no one will ever follow the great man more carefully
through the intricacies of his career: from the University
of Vienna, where he read Marx and studied under Eugene Boehm-Bawerk;
to the University of Czernowitz, where he fought a duel with
the school librarian over students' right to borrowing privileges
(he won); to the University of Graz, from which he sallied
forth to lecture in English at Columbia University in 1913.
The Great War interrupted his career, but he remained on the
sidelines; afterwards he served a disastrous term as finance
minister of the new Austrian Republic, and another, even more
calamitous appointment as chairman of the Beidermann Bank.
In 1925, he repaired to a professorship at Bonn, visited Harvard
first in 1927, then moved there altogether in 1932.
There he remained there until he died in 1950, though for
a time he hoped for an offer from The Institute for Advanced
Study, where von Neumann, Einstein and Goedel had been hired,
and agonized over an invitation from Yale.
Then, too, Schumpeter's personal life is highly interesting.
An only child, he was born and educated in the dying light
of the old Austro-Hungarian Empire. His father, a textile
manufacturer, was killed in an apparent hunting accident when
he was four; his mother, a strong and magnetic woman, remarried
when he was ten -- to a three-star Austrian general thirty
years her senior. Perhaps that was all that was needed to
turn her son, an only child, into a womanizer of the first
rank. Just as Sylvia Nasar found a wide audience for her life
of John Nash by framing A Beautiful Mind as a love story, so McCraw has delivered something
of a page-turner by emphasizing the extent to which Schumpeter
depended on the women in his life to buttress his self-image,
which was never very strong. When his mother and beloved second
wife died within a few weeks of one another in 1926 (when
he is 43), he turned them into personal saints, whom he regularly
addressed in his journals ever after as die Hasen, meaning, literally, rabbits, or, more likely, little
pets. Die Ewig Weibliche,
the Eternal Feminine, was never more in evidence than when
he turned to his diary after giving his presidential Address
to the American Economic Association, in 1948:
"The might of the Hasen stood out gloriously.
Thank you, Hasen, for supporting me and for one of the richest
presents. Everyone rose for my presidential address.
The whole of the Cleveland ballroom audience rose and gave
me applause. That was not poor and that was not small. And
yet so undeserved. Thank you Hasen. O give me the strength,
O Gott and Hasen. And let me slowly get accustomed to
the idea of a voluntary [accepting] death. Should I say, help
me to a voluntary death.? O Gott and Hasen thank you. Bless
1949 if you want to. Not much more than a year can I expect."
(Fifty-three weeks later he died, whereupon his third wife,
the admirable Elizabeth Boody Schumpeter, labored over the
manuscript of his last book, A History of Economic Analysis,
until it was finally published in 1954..)
Best of all. McCraw is an extremely good interpreter of Schumpeter's
published work, which, in fact, not many people have read
in anything resembling its entirety. For instance, I have
struggled through most of Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy,
which Schumpeter correctly refers to in his journal as his
"book of essays." It is a thoroughly dated book, enlivened
mainly by three sparkling chapters on the inner nature of
capitalism near the beginning. But I am one of many students
who in the post-World War II generation had never so much
as opened Schumpeter's 1939 two-volume opus, Business
Cycles, a book that
arrived stillborn, three years after Keynes' General
Theory of Employment, Interest and Money.
It turns out, though, that Business Cycles is not about business cycles nearly so much as it is
about growth. Beneath an extensive crust of temporizing about
highly predictable historical waves -- "Barring very few cases
in which difficulties arise, it is possible to count off,
historically as well as statistically, six Juglars [8-10 year
cycles] to a Kondratieff [50-60 years] and three Kitchins
[40 months] to a Juglar" -- there is a lengthy and systematic
comparison of the rise of the business systems of Germany,
Great Britain and the United States. The wave theory was written
off quickly enough by economists as "Pythagorean moonshine,"
in young Paul Samuelson's phrase. But its powerful narrative
sections -- its history of the textile industry, of "railroadization,"
and electrification, says McCraw, "presaged the emergence
of modern, rigorous business history -- a new academic sub-discipline."
Nor, perhaps, should this be surprising from the man who wrote
in 1911, in The Theory of Economic Development,
"The spontaneity of [human] wants is small. [It is] the producer
who as a rule initiated economic change., and consumers are
educated by him, if necessary; they are, as it were, taught
to want new things...." But the fact is that Schumpeter's
point was largely lost.
McGraw identifies Schumpeter's two main claims on our attention.
"[He] is the chief proponent and popularizer of the word 'entrepreneur,'
which appeared in the 1934 English edition of his Theory
of Economic Development.
(In the original German edition of 1911, he had used the German
unternehmer, which never caught on, partly because its literal
meaning is 'undertaker.') Because of the importance of entrepreneurship,
and because Schumpeter wrote about it with such insight and
verve, his name will forever be linked with the idea." (Interestingly
enough, the word appears but once in Drucker's essay. Instead
"dynamic disequilibrium," "structural change," "innovation,"
"productivity" and "technological change" do the heavy lifting
there.) The other catchphrase, of course, is "creative destruction."
Schumpeter coined the term in 1942, McCraw relates, "to describe
how innovative capitalist products and methods continually
displace old ones. He gave abundant examples. The factory
wiped out the blacksmith shop. The car superseded the horse
and buggy, and the corporation overthrew the proprietorship.
'Creative destruction is the essential fact about capitalism,'
he wrote. 'Stabilized capitalism is a contradiction in terms.'"
To make his tale come out well, McCraw finds that, more or
less at the last moment, Schumpeter abandoned his life-long
quest for an "exact economics" in order to be redeemed by
history. From the marginalism of his first book, The
Nature and Content of Theoretical Economics,
to the empiricism of his participation in the founding of
the Econometric Society in 1933, to the meglocyclomania of
Business Cycles, to the back-handed certainties of Capitalism,
Socialism and Democracy, Schumpeter
had shared the economists' dream -- a rigorous theory with
which to predict the future. As late as 1946, he was still
trying to learn enough mathematics to be able to set his ideas
in the formal style that had overtaken the field.
But in commencing work on A History of Economic Analysis, he unwittingly "entered a new intellectual phase,"
McCraw says -- one in which he would argue that a "principle
of indeterminacy" was at work in human affairs, such that
the creative responses of specific individuals to changing
circumstances could never be wholly anticipated. "Where he
was headed now, mathematics was unlikely to follow." What
was needed now was history, and plenty of it, Schumpeter argued,
historical case studies designed to address specific standard
questions. In his comments on a research plan that led to
the creation of the Center for Research in Entrepreneurial
History at Harvard, he wrote that such a project could result
"in a new wing being added to the economist's house."
And so it has. Business history is the enterprise in
which McCraw, Alfred Chandler, and many other researchers
have spent their lives, to extremely good effect. McCraw's
biography of Schumpeter is only the latest efflorescence from
the Harvard Business School. Richard Vietor's How Countries
Compete: Strategy, Structure and Government in the Global
Economy has just appeared;
Richard Tedlow's biography of Intel's Andy Grove appeared
last year. Chandler himself has produced narratives of the
development of the consumer electronics and pharmaceutical
industries in the last few years, although he is pressing
ninety. Nor is IT only the Harvard Business School that produces
first-rate history in this vein. Indeed, Pudue's Jonathan
Hughes' 1965 The Vital Few,
reissued in 1985, by which time he was at Northwestern University,
communicates a better sense of the varieties of entrepreneurial
activity than anything that Joseph Schumpeter ever wrote.
At this point I probably should acknowledge that I have a
foot planted firmly in the other camp -- the wing of the economists.
The flip side of all that literary expression by Schumpeter
is that you can get out of him almost anything that you wish.
In Knowledge
and the Wealth of Nations: A Story of Economic Discovery,
I argue that a clearer view of economic growth can be obtained
today through the use of formal methods. Creative destruction
is often now matter-of-factly described as "churn"
or "turbulence," its extent and costs and benefits
measured through the Census Bureau's Longitudinal Employer-Household
Dynamics Program. The study of markets and hierarchies has
been largely overhauled by the likes of Michael Jensen, Oliver
Williamson and their many students. Our view of the economics
of knowledge has been transformed by Paul Romer. So I am somewhat
embarrassed to be going on, uninvited, about the great merit
of business history in general, and of a definitive biography
of Schumpeter in particular.
Indeed, it is the pedagogy that seems to me the greatest
contribution of the group that formed around Chandler, McCraw
and the others at the Harvard Business School. A course known
as "The Coming of Managerial Capitalism" has been taught there
one way or another since the 1920s as an elective. In the
1960s and 1970s, it attracted between twenty and forty students
a year. After Chandler reformulated it in the 1980s,
and, with McCraw, Nancy Koehn and others teaching it, between
300 and 400 students regularly enrolled. More's the pity,
then, that when Harvard University president Derek Bok sought
to persuade Chandler to teach the course to Harvard College
students across the Charles River, business school dean John
McArthur quietly stalled the plan.
The result is that introductory economics, with its analytic
bent, remains the single most popular course in the college,
completely uncontested by a more plausible account of the
path to the present day. History is too important to leave
to schools of business, much less to economics departments.