From “science as measurement” to “measurement and theory”: the Cowles Commission and contrasting empirical methodologies at the University of Chicago, 1943 to 1955

Author(s):  
Robert W. Dimand ◽  
Sylvie Rivot
Author(s):  
Charles Baré

Cet article est le résultat de travaux et de relevés effectués en 1942. A l’époque, les études entreprises avaient été inspirées surtout par les œuvres des précurseurs Ragnar Frisch, Henry Schultz, Henry L. Moore, H. R. Tolley et M.J.B. Ezekiel. Dès avant les hostilités cependant, des développements importants avaient été apportés à l’étude de l’élasticité de la demande, en particulier par l’introduction du calcul de l’élasticité de la quantité demandée en fonction du revenu de la population, qui venait s’ajouter au calcul traditionnel de l’élasticité de la quantité demandée en fonction du prix du produit considéré. L’économétrie connaît actuellement des développements considérables, dus surtout aux efforts déployés aux Etats-Unis d’Amérique (The University of Chicago : Cowles Commission for Research in Economics), en Grande-Bretagne (University of Cambridge : Department of Applied Economics) et en France où des travaux importants furent entrepris par des équipes dirigées par M. René Roy et par M. Maurice Allais, ainsi qu’à l’Institut des Sciences économiques appliquées, dirigé par M. François Perroux, et également par les ingénieurs des grandes entreprises nationalisées. L’école néerlandaise a continué de participer activement aux recherches.


Author(s):  
Philip Mirowski ◽  
Edward Nik-Khah

One of the most important contributions of the Cowles Commission in the period 1944 to 1954 was to jump-start the formalization of the orthodox approach to the economics of information. The tension with the neoliberals also housed at the University of Chicago was fruitful. Members such as Jacob Marschak, Leonid Hurwicz, Kenneth Arrow, and Stanley Reiter all struggled to infuse the utility function with some sort of cognitive capacity. Their struggles to make this do political double-duty set the stage for the subsequent evolution of the economics of information.


2014 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
Olav Bjerkholt

The article reviews the early history of the Cowles Commission (CC), its close and intertwined relations with the Econometric Society (ES), and the influence and guidance of Ragnar Frisch. It provides detail on three rounds of choosing a research director for CC in 1937–38, in 1939 and, particularly, at the end of 1942. Haavelmo’s work in the early 1940s came to play a major role for the econometric research at the Cowles Commission under Jacob Marschak as research director 1943–48. The article points to the importance of Abraham Wald and Jacob Marschak for the success of Haavelmo’s venture and its influence and tells the story of how it came about that Haavelmo’s ideas were adopted, applied, and disseminated by the Cowles Commission. Thus the mention of Trygve Haavelmo in the title is referring also to his econometric ideas. The ideas themselves and their further evolvement at the CC have been a dominating theme in the history of econometrics literature, e.g., Hildreth (1986), Epstein (1987), Morgan (1990), Qin (1993), and Christ (1994). The article discusses the recruitment, the inner workings, and various other concerns of the Cowles econometricians, from Marxism to Black Magic. It recounts at some length the efforts made by Marschak to recruit Abraham Wald to the University of Chicago and the Cowles Commission. The article can be read as a sequel to Bjerkholt (2005, 2007).


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document