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Contents • • • • • • • Life Kindleberger was born in on October 12, 1910. Lister Serial Numbers on this page. He graduated from in 1928, in 1932, and received a from in 1937. He died on July 7, 2003 in. He was married to the late Sarah Miles Kindleberger for 59 years, and was survived by four children: of, MO; of Cambridge, MA (a reporter at the ); Sarah Kindleberger of Lincoln, MA; and E. Randall Kindleberger of Machias, ME. Work His earliest book was International Short-Term Capital Movements (1937). Serial Mojo Sakhreh Part 1. Although mainly an academic at MIT after 1948, Kindleberger during the course of his life worked for several American institutions, such as the (1936–1939), the in (1939–1940), and the Board of Governors of the (1940–1942).
Kindleberger was a leading architect of the. In 1945-1947 he served at the (Acting Director, Office of Economic Security Policy), and shortly (1947–1948) as counselor for the. As a 'historical' economist (or economic historian), Kindleberger relied on exposition and knowledge of rather than mathematical models to prove his point. His book, Manias, Panics, and Crashes is still required reading at many Masters of Business Administration (MBA) programs in the United States.
Kindleberger described his around-the-clock work to develop and launch the with singular passion in a 1973 interview. 'We were conscious of a great sense of excitement about the plan. Himself was a great, great man—funny, odd but great—Olympian in his moral quality.
We'd stay up all night, night after night. The first work ever done that I know about in economics on computers used the Pentagon's computers at night for the Marshall Plan. I had a tremendous sense of gratification from working so hard on it,' Kindleberger said. Project Management By K Nagarajan Pdf Converter. Kindleberger was on familiar terms with noted economists and was a graduate of the and (A.M., Ph. D.), later rising to the eminent position of Ford International Professor of Economics at MIT. The World in Depression His 1973 and 1986 book The World in Depression 1929-1939 (University of California Press, 1986 [Revised and Enlarged Edition]) advances an idiosyncratic, internationalist view of the causes and nature of the. Blaming the peculiar length and depth of the Depression on the hesitancy of the US in taking over leadership of the world economy when Britain was no longer up to the role after WWI, he concludes that 'for the world economy to be stabilized, there has to be a stabilizer—one stabilizer', by which, in the context of the interwar years at least, he means the United States.