- Anna Schwartz
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name = Anna Schwartz
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birth_date = 1915
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field =Economics
work_institution =National Bureau of Economic Research
occupation =Economist
alma_mater =Barnard College Columbia University
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known_for = Analysis ofmoney Analysis ofbanking
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children =Anna Jacobson Schwartz (1915) is an
economist at theNational Bureau of Economic Research inNew York City . She is a past president of the Western Economic Association [http://www.weainternational.org/] . She has changed the understanding of how the world works for economists as well as politicians, policy makers, and journalists. She has changed understanding in more than one field of economic analysis and has done so in the course of a long career of continuous activity.Early career
She graduated from
Barnard College inNew York City at the age of 18, gained her Master’s in Economics fromColumbia University when she was 19, and had started her career as a professional economist one year later (in 1964, she would earn a Ph.D. fromColumbia University as well). In 1936 she married Isaac Schwartz, with whom she raised four children.Her first published paper appeared only four years subsequently, in the 1940 issue of the Review of Economics and Statistics [http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=4&tid=17] – then as now a leading journal. Written by Arthur Gayer, Isaiah Finkelstein, and, as she then was still known professionally, Anna Jacobson, the paper was on "British Share Prices, 1811 - 1850". That paper was a precursor of several aspects of her subsequent work. It was on financial data, on data drawn from Britain, and was meticulous in the presentation, explanation, and interpretation of the data. An example is the discussion of the change in the behaviour of the share price index after 1824.
This change, they showed, told nothing about the British economy or
capital market s generally, but resulted from the inclusion of mining stocks – then as now sometimes rather speculative investments. As they wrote, "This example … has been cited to illustrate the need for constant reference to the historical meaning of movements in the indices." The care to put data in its historical context has characterised all her work, and is one of the ways in which it is an example to every economist.National Bureau of Economic Research
In 1941 she joined the staff of the
National Bureau of Economic Research . She has worked in theNew York City office of that organization from then right up to the present, and indeed continues to work there five full days a week. When she joined the National Bureau, it was engaged in the study ofbusiness cycles .Growth and Fluctuations in the British Economy
In collaboration with Arthur Gayer and
Walt Whitman Rostow , she produced the monumental "Growth and Fluctuations in the British Economy, 1790 – 1850: An Historical, Statistical, and Theoretical Study of Britain’s Economic Development". It appeared in two volumes in 1953, its publication having been delayed by the war for some ten years after it was completed. That book is still highly regarded among economic scholars of the period. It was reprinted in 1975. Arthur Gayer had died before the book’s first appearance, but the other two authors wrote a new introduction which reviewed literature on the subject published since the original publication date. They admitted that there had developed what they called an "amicable divergence of view" on the interpretation of some the facts set out in the book. In particular, Anna Schwartz indicated that she had in the light of recent theoretical and empirical research revised her view of the importance ofmonetary policy and her interpretation ofinterest rate movements."A Monetary History of the United States"
She is most famous for her collaboration with
Milton Friedman on "A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1963" which hypothesized that changes inmonetary policy have large effects on the economy. In particular, they lay a large portion of the blame for theGreat Depression at the door of theFederal Reserve .Research with Milton Friedman
For years before her first book was reprinted, another economist had joined what might be called the Schwartz team of co-authors. Prompted by
Arthur F. Burns , then atColumbia University and the National Bureau, subsequently Chairman of the US Federal Reserve System, she and the young economistMilton Friedman teamed up to examine the role of money in thebusiness cycle . Their first publication was "A Monetary History of the United States, 1867 – 1960". That appeared in 1963, along with the equally famous article, "Money and Business Cycles", which as with her first paper was published in the Review of Economics and Statistics. They also wrote the books "Monetary Statistics of the United States" in 1970 and "Monetary Trends in the United States and the United Kingdom: Their Relation to Income, Prices, and Interest Rates, 1867 – 1975" in 1982.Each of these volumes was an astonishing combination of analytical insight, imagination, and rigour, with a massive weight of scrupulously sifted evidence. The effect of the first volume alone was truly extraordinary. It appeared at a time when the influence of money on economic activity and prices was downplayed or denied by the majority of economists. That book changed the consensus. While there of course remain differences, of emphasis at least, among economists, few would now deny the importance of monetary control for the control of inflation.
Financial regulation
She has also changed minds over
financial regulation . Economists, bankers, and policy makers have been and are concerned with the stability of the financial system. Anna Schwartz, in a series of studies in the 1970s, 1980s, and indeed up to the present day – in some remarks at a conference just over a year ago inHelsinki – has emphasized that price level stability is essential forfinancial system stability. The uncertainty engendered by the absence of the first makes the latter unattainable. But even if we have price level stability, from time to time individual financial institutions will fail. Drawing on evidence from over two centuries she has demonstrated that such failures do not have major consequences for the economy so long as their effects are prevented from spreading through the financial system. Individual institutions should be allowed to fail, not supported with taxpayer’s money. This argument, too, is widely (although not yet universally) accepted.Other areas of work
There have been other areas of her work including
* international transmission ofinflation and ofbusiness cycles
* role of government inmonetary policy
* measuring the output ofbank s
* the behaviour ofinterest rates , ondeflation , on monetary standardsThis work is of high quality and she has developed younger scholars by her willingness to work with them, though she held teaching positions for only a short part of her career. They learned the methods of her work as well as her approach, which is the scrupulous examination of the past, so as both to understand it better and to draw lessons for the present. In 2007 she concentrated her efforts on US official intervention in the foreign exchange market using Federal Reserve data from 1962
Work overseas
She has also done such work overseas. Some years ago the Department of Banking and Finance at City University,
London, England , started a research project on the monetary history of theUnited Kingdom . For many years, she was an advisor to that project. She commented on papers, suggested lines of approach, came and spoke to students and at academic conferences where the work was discussed.Books
*"Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1961" (with Milton Friedman) ISBN 0-691-00354-8
*"Monetary Statistics Of The United States: Estimates, Sources, Methods" (with Milton Friedman) ISBN 0-87014-210-0
*"Growth and Fluctuations in the British Economy, 1790 – 1850: An Historical, Statistical, and Theoretical Study of Britain’s Economic Development" (with Arthur Gayer and Walt Whitman Rostow) ISBN 1-49902-898-9
*"Money in Historical Perspective" (with an introduction by Michael D. Bordo and Milton Friedman) ISBN 0-226-74228-8External links
* [http://cepa.newschool.edu/het/profiles/schwartz.htm Major works of Anna J. Schwartz]
* [http://www.nber.org/vitae/vita548.htm Schwartz's CV at the National Bureau of Economic Research]
* [http://www.eh.net/bookreviews/library/rockoff.shtml Essay on "A Monetary History of the United States"]
* [http://www.clevelandfed.org/Research/Workpaper/2003/wp03-18.pdf The Great Depression and the Friedman-Schwartz Hypothesis]
* [http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc/MoneySupply.html Money Supply] , by Anna J. Schwartz. "Concise encyclopedia of economics " onEconlib
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