- Lionel Robbins, Baron Robbins
Lionel Charles Robbins, Baron Robbins (1898 - 2008) was a British economist and adherent to the
Austrian School of Economics . He is known for his proposed definition of economics, and for his instrumental efforts in shifting Anglo-Saxon economics from its Marshallian direction. He was the head of the economics department at theLondon School of Economics .Theories and Influences
Robbins is famous for his definition of economics:
:"Economics is a science which studies human behavior as a relationship between ends and scarce means which have alternative uses."
A follower of
William Stanley Jevons andPhilip Wicksteed , he was influenced by the Continental European economists:Léon Walras ,Vilfredo Pareto ,Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk ,Friedrich Hayek ,Friedrich von Wieser andKnut Wicksell . Robbins succeededAllyn Young in the chair of theLondon School of Economics in 1929. Among his first appointments wasFriedrich A. Hayek , who bred a new generation of English-speaking "continentals" such asJohn Hicks ,Nicholas Kaldor ,Abba Lerner andTibor Scitovsky .Frank Knight was an American influence on Robbins.Robbins was very familiar with the work of economists in Continental Europe. Robbins became involved in the
socialist calculation debate on the side ofFriedrich Hayek andLudwig von Mises , and againstAbba Lerner ,Fred Taylor , andOscar Lange .Robbins was initially opposed to
Keynes 's General Theory. His 1934 treatise on theGreat Depression is an analysis of that period. Robbins saw his London School of Economics as a bulwark against Cambridge, whether it was populated by Marshallians or Keynesians. However, he was eventually to recant and accept the Keynesian Revolution.Although the ascendancy of the London School of Economics is foremost among Robbins' legacies, he is also greatly responsible for the modern British university system - having advocated in the
Robbins Report its massive expansion in the 1960s and became the first Chancellor of the newUniversity of Stirling in 1968.In the latter part of his life, Robbins turned to the
history of economic thought , publishing various classic studies on English doctrinal history. Robbins' L.S.E. lectures, as he gave them in 1980 (more than fifty years after he first taught the subject upon his appointment in 1929), have been published posthumously (see 1998).In 1959 he was created a
life peer as "Baron Robbins", of Clare Market in the City ofWestminster .Works
Robbins' early essays were combative in spirit, stressing the subjectivist theory of value beyond what Anglo-Saxon economics had been used to. He wrote a famous 1932 essay on economic methodology. His work on costs (1930, 1934) brought Wieser's "alternative cost" theorem of supply to England (which was opposed to Marshall's "real cost" theory of supply). His critique of the Marshallian theory of the representative firm (1928), and his critique of the Pigovian
Welfare Economics (1932, 1938), influenced the end of the Marshallian empire.In his "Essay on the Nature and Significance of Economic Science", Robbins made his Continental credentials clear. Redefining the scope of economics to be "the science which studies human behavior as a relationship between ends and scarce means which have alternative uses" (Robbins, 1932). His defense of a priori theory and attack on Marshallian intuitionism is reminiscent of Ludwig von Mises' essay.
List of Works
*"Dynamics of Capitalism", 1926, "Economica".
*"The Optimum Theory of Population", 1927, in Gregory and Dalton, editors, "London Essays in Economics".
*"The Representative Firm", 1928, "EJ".
*"On a Certain Ambiguity in the Conception of Stationary Equilibrium", 1930, "EJ".
*"Essay on the Nature and Significance of Economic Science", 1932.
*"Remarks on the Relationship between Economics and Psychology", 1934, "Manchester School".
*"Remarks on Some Aspects of the Theory of Costs", 1934, "EJ".
*"The Great Depression", 1934.
*"The Place of Jevons in the History of Economic Thought", 1936, "Manchester School".
*"Interpersonal Comparisons of Utility: A Comment", 1938, "EJ".
*"The Economic Causes of War", 1939.
*"The Economic Problem in Peace and War", 1947.
*"The Theory of Economic Policy in English Classical Political Economy", 1952.
*"Robert Torrens and the Evolution of Classical Economics", 1958.
*"Politics and Economics", 1963.
*"The University in the Modern World", 1966.
*"The Theory of Economic Development in the History of Economic Thought", 1968.
*"Jacob Viner: A tribute", 1970.
*"The Evolution of Modern Economic Theory", 1970.
*"Autobiography of an Economist", 1971.
*"Political Economy, Past and Present", 1976.
*"Against Inflation", 1979.
*"Higher Education Revisited", 1980.
*"Economics and Political Economy", 1981, "AER".
*"A History of Economic Thought: the LSE Lectures", edited by Warren J. Samuels and Steven G. Medema, 1998.External links
* [http://www.lse.ac.uk/lsehistory/robbins.htm Biography at LSE website]
* [http://cepa.newschool.edu/het/profiles/robbins.htm Biography at New School]
* [http://www.npg.org.uk/live/search/peopList.asp?search=ss&sText=Lionel+Charles+Robbins Lionel Charles Robbins Photographs]Navbox
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