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The Wordly Philosophers, Heilbroner, history of economics,

MoneyWeek book review: An essential guide to economics

16.06.2006

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The worldly philosophersEconomics books rarely make for blockbusters. The few big-selling ones, such as the recent Freakonomics, peg themselves on being a form of alterno-economics where the economist comes out of his ivory tower to see how the real world works. So the fact that a book as unashamedly ideas-driven as The Worldly Philosophers has shifted more than two million copies marks it out as something unusual.

Over 50 years on from its first edition, Robert Heilbroner’s book remains the best layman’s guide to the early history of economics ever written and essential reading for any non-specialist who wants to understand how capitalist society developed. Structuring it as an account of the life and work of seven major thinkers, Heilbroner deftly picks out the common threads that run through their theories, identifying where they disprove, contradict and build on each other’s ideas to create a smooth picture of a science in development and the world that developed it.

Running from Adam Smith’s then-radical views on how the market would bring greater wealth and meritocracy to Britain, through Thomas Malthus and David Ricardo’s gloomy convictions that overpopulation and land shortages would make this a false hope, and onto the theories of Karl Marx, Thorstein Veblen, John Maynard Keynes, Joseph Schumpeter and a host of supporting players, the breadth of ideas and history covered is outstanding. Heilbroner never becomes bogged down in side-issues, his prose is sharp and he has a gift for simplifying complexities. Even the infamously difficult-to-read Ricardo becomes easy to digest.

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The only problem is that it simply doesn’t go far enough. Recent editions added a brief epilogue criticising modern economics for being too obsessed with scientific method and not paying enough attention to the social factors that also affect economies, but there’s still no analysis of Milton Friedman and the other monetarists whose theories largely eased out Keynes’s from the late 1960s and early 1970s onwards. Similarly, there is nothing but brief notes on Friedrich Hayek and other influential Austrian School economists (except Schumpeter, generally considered an apostate by Austrian purists). The first Chicago School and the interesting, idiosyncratic Frank Knight are also ignored. Given that Heilbroner, a leftish economist and peer of JK Galbraith, was opposed to most of their ideas, any analysis would probably not have been very balanced. But the omission does leave the reader wanting an equally sharp guide to their work. Unfortunately, none exists.

The Worldly Philosophers by Robert Heilbroner is published by Penguin and costs £10.99



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