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Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk

 
Eugen Von Böhm Bawerk

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Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk



 
 
Eugen Ritter von Böhm-Bawerk (February 12, 1851 in Brno
Brno

Brno is the second-largest city in the Czech Republic. It was founded in 1243, although the area had been settled since the 5th century. Today Brno has 403,304 inhabitants and is the seat of the Constitutional Court of the Czech Republic, Supreme Court, Supreme Administrative Court, Supreme Prosecutor's Office and Ombudsman....
 – August 27, 1914 in Vienna
Vienna

Vienna is the Capital of Republic of Austria and also one of the nine states of Austria. Vienna is Austria's primary city, with a population of about 1.7 million...
) was an Austrian
Austrian Empire

The Austrian Empire was a periodization successor state empire founded on a remnant of the Holy Roman Empire centered on what is today's Austria that officially lasted from 1804 to 1867....
 economist
Economist

An economist is an expert in the social science of economics. The individual may also study, develop, and apply theories and concepts from economics and write about economic policy....
 who made important contributions to the development of Austrian economics
Austrian School

The Austrian School is a Heterodox economics school of economics. It emphasizes the spontaneous organizing power of the price mechanism, holds that the complexity of subjective human choices makes mathematical modelling of the evolving market extremely difficult and therefore advocates a laissez faire approach to the economy....
. Trained in the University of Vienna
University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is a public university located in Vienna, Austria. Having opened in 1365, it is one of the oldest universities in Europe....
 as a lawyer where he read Carl Menger
Carl Menger

Carl Menger was the founder of the Austrian School of economics, famous for contributing to the development of the theory of marginal utility that refuted the cost-of-production theories of value developed by the classical economics such as Adam Smith and David Ricardo....
's Principles of Economics
Principles of Economics

Principles of Economics is a book by economist Carl Menger which is credited with the founding of the Austrian School of economics. It was one of the first modern treatises to advance the theory of marginal utility....
.
Though he never studied under Menger, he quickly became an adherent of his theories. Joseph Schumpeter
Joseph Schumpeter

Joseph Alois Schumpeter was an economist and political scientist born in Moravia, then Austria-Hungary, now Czech Republic. He popularized the term "creative destruction" in economics....
 said that Böhm-Bawerk "was so completely the enthusiastic disciple of Menger that it is hardly necessary to look for other influences." During his time at the Vienna university he became good friends with Friedrich von Wieser
Friedrich von Wieser

Friedrich Freiherr von Wieser was an early member of the Austrian School of economics. Born in Vienna the son of a high official in the war ministry, he first trained in sociology and law....
, who later became Boehm-Bawerk's brother-in-law.

After completing his studies he entered the Austrian ministry of finance.






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Eugen Ritter von Böhm-Bawerk (February 12, 1851 in Brno
Brno

Brno is the second-largest city in the Czech Republic. It was founded in 1243, although the area had been settled since the 5th century. Today Brno has 403,304 inhabitants and is the seat of the Constitutional Court of the Czech Republic, Supreme Court, Supreme Administrative Court, Supreme Prosecutor's Office and Ombudsman....
 – August 27, 1914 in Vienna
Vienna

Vienna is the Capital of Republic of Austria and also one of the nine states of Austria. Vienna is Austria's primary city, with a population of about 1.7 million...
) was an Austrian
Austrian Empire

The Austrian Empire was a periodization successor state empire founded on a remnant of the Holy Roman Empire centered on what is today's Austria that officially lasted from 1804 to 1867....
 economist
Economist

An economist is an expert in the social science of economics. The individual may also study, develop, and apply theories and concepts from economics and write about economic policy....
 who made important contributions to the development of Austrian economics
Austrian School

The Austrian School is a Heterodox economics school of economics. It emphasizes the spontaneous organizing power of the price mechanism, holds that the complexity of subjective human choices makes mathematical modelling of the evolving market extremely difficult and therefore advocates a laissez faire approach to the economy....
. Trained in the University of Vienna
University of Vienna

The University of Vienna is a public university located in Vienna, Austria. Having opened in 1365, it is one of the oldest universities in Europe....
 as a lawyer where he read Carl Menger
Carl Menger

Carl Menger was the founder of the Austrian School of economics, famous for contributing to the development of the theory of marginal utility that refuted the cost-of-production theories of value developed by the classical economics such as Adam Smith and David Ricardo....
's Principles of Economics
Principles of Economics

Principles of Economics is a book by economist Carl Menger which is credited with the founding of the Austrian School of economics. It was one of the first modern treatises to advance the theory of marginal utility....
.
Though he never studied under Menger, he quickly became an adherent of his theories. Joseph Schumpeter
Joseph Schumpeter

Joseph Alois Schumpeter was an economist and political scientist born in Moravia, then Austria-Hungary, now Czech Republic. He popularized the term "creative destruction" in economics....
 said that Böhm-Bawerk "was so completely the enthusiastic disciple of Menger that it is hardly necessary to look for other influences." During his time at the Vienna university he became good friends with Friedrich von Wieser
Friedrich von Wieser

Friedrich Freiherr von Wieser was an early member of the Austrian School of economics. Born in Vienna the son of a high official in the war ministry, he first trained in sociology and law....
, who later became Boehm-Bawerk's brother-in-law.

After completing his studies he entered the Austrian ministry of finance. He spent the 1880s at the University of Innsbruck (1881-1889). During this time he published the first two (out of three) volumes of his magnum opus
Magnum opus

Magnum opus , from the Latin meaning great work, refers to the largest, and perhaps the best, greatest, most popular, or most renowned achievement of an author, artist, or composer....
, Capital and Interest
Capital and Interest

Capital and Interest is a three-volume work on finance published by Austrian School Eugen von B?hm-Bawerk.The first two volumes were published in the 1880s when he was teaching at the University of Innsbruck....
.


In 1889 he was called to Vienna
Vienna

Vienna is the Capital of Republic of Austria and also one of the nine states of Austria. Vienna is Austria's primary city, with a population of about 1.7 million...
 by the finance ministry to draft a proposal for direct-tax reform. The Austrian system at the time taxed production heavily, especially during wartime, providing massive disincentives to investment. Böhm-Bawerk's proposal called for a modern income tax
Income tax

An income tax is a tax levied on the financial income of people, corporations, or other legal entities. Various income tax systems exist, with varying degrees of tax incidence....
, which was soon approved and met with a great deal of success in the next few years.

He then became Austria
Austria

Austria , officially the Republic of Austria , is a landlocked country in Central Europe. It borders both Germany and the Czech Republic to the north, Slovakia and Hungary to the east, Slovenia and Italy to the south, and Switzerland and Liechtenstein to the west....
n Minister of Finance in 1895. He was to serve briefly and again on another occasion, although a third time he remained in the post from 1900-1904. As Finance Minister he fought continuously for strict maintenance of the legally fixed gold standard
Gold standard

The gold standard is a monetary system in which a region's common media of exchange are paper notes that are normally freely convertible into pre-set, fixed quantities of gold....
 and a balanced budget. In 1902 he eliminated the sugar subsidy, which had been a feature of the Austrian economy for nearly two centuries. He finally resigned in 1904, when the increased fiscal demands of the army threatened to unbalance the budget. Economic historian Alexander Gerschenkron
Alexander Gerschenkron

Alexander Gerschenkron was a Russian-born United States Jewish economic historian and professor in Harvard, trained in the Austrian School of economics....
 criticized his "penny pinching, 'not-one-heller-more-policies'," and lays much of the blame for Austria's economic backwardness on Böhm-Bawerk's unwillingness to spend heavily on public works projects. Joseph Schumpeter praised Böhm-Bawerk's efforts toward "the financial stability of the country." His image was on the one-hundred schilling banknote between 1984 and 2002, when the euro
Euro

The euro is the official currency of 16 out of 27 European Union member state of the European Union . The states, known collectively as the Eurozone are: Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Republic of Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Malta, the Netherlands, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, and Spain....
 was introduced.

He wrote extensive critiques of Karl Marx
Karl Marx

Karl Heinrich Marx was a Germanphilosophy, political economy, historian, sociologist, humanism, political theorist and revolutionary credited as the founder of communism....
's economics in the 1880s and 1890s, and several prominent Marxists—including Rudolf Hilferding
Rudolf Hilferding

File:Bundesarchiv Bild 102-06069, Rudolf Hilferding mit Gattin.jpgRudolf Hilferding was an Austrian-born Marxism economist, leading socialist theorist, politician and chief theoretician for the Social Democratic Party of Germany during the Weimar Republic, almost universally recognized as the SPD's foremost theoretician of his century, and...
—attended his seminar in 1905-06. He returned to teaching in 1904, with a chair at the University of Vienna. He taught many students including Joseph Schumpeter
Joseph Schumpeter

Joseph Alois Schumpeter was an economist and political scientist born in Moravia, then Austria-Hungary, now Czech Republic. He popularized the term "creative destruction" in economics....
, Ludwig von Mises
Ludwig von Mises

Ludwig Heinrich Edler von Mises was an Austrian economics, philosopher, and liberalism who had a major influence on the modern libertarianism movement....
 and Henryk Grossman
Henryk Grossman

Henryk Grossman alternative spelling Henryk Grossmann , was a Polish-German economist and historian of Jewish descent.Grossman was born in Krak?w and studied law and economics in Krak?w and Vienna....
. He died in 1914.

Published work


The first volume of Capital and Interest, which Ludwig von Mises decreed as "the most eminent contribution to modern economic theory", titled History and Critique of Interest Theories (1884), is an exhaustive study of the alternative treatments of interest
Interest

Interest is a fee paid on borrowed assets. It is the price paid for the use of borrowed money , or, money earned by deposited funds .Assets that are sometimes lent with interest include money, shares, consumer goods through hire purchase, major assets such as aircraft finance, and even entire factories in finance lease arrangements....
: use theories, productivity theories, abstinence theories, and so on.

Also included was a critique of Marx
Karl Marx

Karl Heinrich Marx was a Germanphilosophy, political economy, historian, sociologist, humanism, political theorist and revolutionary credited as the founder of communism....
's exploitation theory
Exploitation theory

The exploitation theory is the theory, most associated with Marxists, that profit is the result of the exploitation of wage earners by their employers....
. Böhm-Bawerk argued that capitalists do not exploit their workers; they actually help employees by providing them with an income well in advance of the revenue from the goods they produced, stating "Labor cannot increase its share at the expense of capital." In particular, he argued that the Marxist theory of exploitation ignores the dimension of time in production, which he discussed in his theory of roundaboutness
Roundaboutness

Roundaboutness, or roundabout methods of production, is the term used to describe the process whereby capital goods are produced first and then, with the help of the capital goods, the desired consumer goods are produced....
 and that a redistribution of profits from capitalist industries will undermine the importance of the interest rate
Interest rate

An interest rate is the price a borrower pays for the use of money they do not own, for instance a small company might borrow from a bank to kick start their business, and the return a lender receives for deferring the use of funds, by lending it to the borrower....
 as a vital tool for monetary policy. From this criticism it follows that, according to Böhm-Bawerk, the whole value of a product is not produced by the worker, but that labour can only be paid at the present value of any foreseeable output.

Karl Marx and the Close of His System (1896) examined Marx's theory of labour value
Labor theory of value

The labor theories of value are theory of value according to which the Value of commodities are related to the Labour needed to produce them....
, believing the supposed error in Marx's system to have resulted from a self-contradiction of Marx's law of value, namely how the rate of profit and the prices of production of the third volume of Marx's Capital
Das Kapital

is an extensive treatise on political economy written in German language by Karl Marx and edited in part by Friedrich Engels. The book is a critical analysis of capitalism....
 contradict Marx's theory of value in the first volume. He also attacks Marx for downplaying the influence of supply and demand
Supply and demand

...
 in determining permanent price, and for deliberate ambiguity with such concepts.

Böhm-Bawerk's Positive Theory of Capital (1889), offered as the second volume of Capital and Interest, elaborated on the economy's time-consuming production processes and of the interest payments they entail. Book III (part of the second volume), Value and Price, developed Menger's ideas of marginal utility
Marginal utility

In economics, the marginal utility of a Good or of a Service is the utility of the specific use to which an agent would put a given increase in that good or service, or of the specific use that would be abandoned in response to a given decrease....
 outlined in his Principles of Economics, to develop the idea of subjective value as related to marginalism
Marginalism

Marginalism is the use of marginal concepts within economics. The central concept of marginalism proper is that of marginal utility, but marginalists following the lead of Alfred Marshall were further heavily dependent upon the concept of Marginal product in their explanation of cost; and the Neoclassical economics tradition that emerged fro...
, in that things only have value insofar as such people want such goods:

A pioneer farmer had five sacks of grain, with no way of selling them or buying more. He had five possible uses—as basic feed for himself, food to build strength, food for his chickens for dietary variation, an ingredient for making whisky and feed for his parrots to amuse him. Then the farmer lost one sack of grain. Instead of reducing every activity by a fifth, the farmer simply starved the parrots as they were of less utility than the other four uses, in other words they were on the margin
Margin

Margin may refer to:*Margin *Margin , a type of financial collateral used to cover credit risk*Margin , the white space that surrounds the content of a page...
. And it is on the margin, and not with a view to the big picture, that we make economic decisions.


Further Essays on Capital and Interest (1921) was the third volume, which originally started as appendices to the second volume.

His critique of Marx's theories was put under intense scrutiny by Marxian economists, such as Nikolai Bukharin
Nikolai Bukharin

Nikolai Ivanovich Bukharin , was a Bolshevik Russian Revolution of 1917 and intelligentsia and Soviet Union politician....
, who argued in Economic Theory of the Leisure Class that Böhm-Bawerk's axiomatic assumptions of individual freedom in his subjectivist theories are fallacious in that economic phenomena can only be understood under the prism of a coherent, contextualised, and historical analysis of society, such as Marx's.

Many of Böhm-Bawerk's works were brought to the United States by Chicago industrialist and avid libertarian Frederick Nymeyer
Frederick Nymeyer

Frederick Nymeyer was an industrialist from South Holland, Illinois, and a vocal advocate of early libertarianism and Austrian economics.Nymeyer founded the Libertarian Press and was largely responsible for bringing the economic writings of Eugen von B?hm-Bawerk to the United States....
 thru Libertarian Press.

See also


  • List of Austrian scientists
    List of Austrian scientists

    This is a list of Austrian scientists and scientists from the Austria of Austria-Hungary....
  • List of Austrians
    List of Austrians

    Presented below are lists of famous Austrians.Arts/culture*Pauline von Metternich, patron of music and cultureActors/Actresses...


External links

  • , by Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk
  • by Roger Garrison on the . The article has more detail on his intellectual contribution, especially on the theory of interest.
  • Biography in the .
  • Complete text, authoritative edition, at .
  • Complete text, authoritative edition, at .