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Entangled Economists: Ragnar Frisch and Jan Tinbergen
by
Dekker, Erwin
in
20th century
/ Business cycles
/ Careers
/ Econometrics
/ Economic policy
/ Economists
/ Linear programming
/ Nobel prizes
/ Social responsibility
/ Society
/ Study abroad
/ Theory
/ Tinbergen, Jan
2019
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Do you wish to request the book?
Entangled Economists: Ragnar Frisch and Jan Tinbergen
by
Dekker, Erwin
in
20th century
/ Business cycles
/ Careers
/ Econometrics
/ Economic policy
/ Economists
/ Linear programming
/ Nobel prizes
/ Social responsibility
/ Society
/ Study abroad
/ Theory
/ Tinbergen, Jan
2019
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Journal Article
Entangled Economists: Ragnar Frisch and Jan Tinbergen
2019
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Overview
It is 50 years since the first Nobel Prize in economics was awarded to Jan Tinbergen and Ragnar Frisch. This article analyzes the collaborations between these pioneers of econometrics which spanned four decades and various subfields in economics, based on records of their correspondence. It is demonstrated that, while Frisch was largely responsible for theoretical breakthroughs, Tinbergen was responsible for making them public and popularizing them. This is especially relevant for understanding the development of econometric models in the 1950s, decision models of the 1950s, and subsequent work on utility measurement. This division of labor is analyzed in relation to the goals they pursued in their research and their respective perfectionistic (Frisch) and pragmatic (Tinbergen) approaches to economic science. Both men shared a sense of deep social responsibility, but differences in their personalities and approaches to science generated important differences in scientific recognition and policy influence. Although they are both widely remembered for helping to turn economics into a quantitative empirical science, this article shows that they were motivated by separate personal and political goals which shaped their scientific approaches.
Publisher
Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics
Subject
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