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Business
Ethics MGT610
VU
LESSON
41
John
Kenneth Galbraith (October
15, 1908April 29, 2006)
was an influential Canadian-
American
economist. He was a Keynesian and an
institutionalist, a leading proponent of
20th-
century
American liberalism and progressivism.
His books on economic topics
were bestsellers
in
the 1950s and 1960s.
Galbraith
was a prolific author who
produced four dozen books and
over a thousand articles
on
various
subjects. Among his most
famous works was a popular
trilogy on economics, American
Capitalism
(1952),
The
Affluent Society (1958), and
The
New Industrial State (1967). He
taught
at
Harvard University for many
years. Galbraith was active in
politics, serving in
the
administrations
of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Harry S.
Truman, John F. Kennedy and
Lyndon B.
Johnson;
and among other roles served as
U.S. ambassador to India
under Kennedy.
He
was one of a few two-time recipients of
the Presidential Medal of Freedom. He
received
one
from President Truman in 1946 and another
from President Bill Clinton in
2000[1]. He was
also
awarded the Padma Vibhushan,
India's second highest
civilian award, for his
contributions
to
strengthening ties between India and
the United States. Some of
Galbraith's Ideas
In
The Affluent Society
Galbraith asserts that
classical economic theory was
true for the
eras
before
the present, which were
times of "poverty"; now,
however, we have moved from
a state
of
poverty into an age of
"affluence," and for such an
age, a completely new
economic theory is
needed.
Galbraith's
main argument is that as
society becomes relatively
more affluent, so
private
business
must "create" consumer wants
through advertising, and while it
generates artificial
affluence
through the production of
commercial goods and services, the
"public sector"
becomes
neglected as a result. He pointed
out that while many
Americans were able to
purchase
luxury items, their parks
were polluted and their
children attended poorly
maintained
schools.
He argues that markets alone
will under provide (or fail
to provide at all) for
many
public
goods, whereas private goods are
typically 'overprovided' due to the
process of
advertising
creating artificial demand above
individual's basic
needs.
He
proposed curbing the
consumption of certain products
through greater use of
consumption
taxes,
arguing this could be more
efficient than other forms
of taxes such as labor or land
taxes.
Galbraith's
major proposal was a program he
called "investment in men" - a
large-scale
publicly-funded
education program aimed at empowering
ordinary citizens. Galbraith
wished
to
entrust citizens with the
future of the American
republic.
100
Business
Ethics MGT610
VU
Criticism
of Galbraith's Work
Galbraith's
work and The
Affluent Society in
particular drew sharp criticism
from free-market
supporters
at the time of its
publication.
Milton
Friedman in "Friedman on Galbraith, and
on curing the British
disease" views
Galbraith
as
a 20th-century version of the
early 19th-century Tory radical of
Great Britain. He asserts
that
Galbraith
believes in the superiority of
aristocracy and in its paternalistic
authority, that
consumers
should not be allowed choice
and that all should be
determined by those with
"higher
minds":
"Many
reformers -- Galbraith is not alone in
this -- have as their basic
objection to a free
market
that it frustrates them in
achieving their reforms,
because it enables people to
have
what
they want, not what the
reformers want. Hence every
reformer has a strong
tendency to be
averse
to a free market."
Galbraith
versus Hayek
Two
of the great economists of the 20th
century were John Kenneth
Galbraith and Friedrich
Hayek.
They held very different
views about advertising,
which to a large extent
reflected their
views
about the capitalist system
more broadly.
John
Kenneth Galbraith's most
famous book was The
Affluent Society, which was
published in
1958.
In it, he argued that corporations
use advertising to create demand
for products that
people
otherwise do not want or
need. The market system
should not be applauded, he
believed,
for satisfying desires that
it has itself created. Galbraith was
skeptical that
economic
growth
was leading to higher levels of
well-being, because people's
aspirations were
being
made
to keep pace with their
increased material prosperity. He
worried that as advertising
and
salesmanship
artificially enhanced the desire
for private goods, public
spending on such
items
as
better schools and better parks
suffered. The end result,
according to Galbraith, was
"private
opulence
and public squalor." Galbraith
policy recommendation was clear:
Increase the size of
government.
Friedrich
Hayek's most famous book was
The
Road to Serfdom, published
in 1944. It argued
that
an extensive government role in
the economy inevitably means
a sacrifice of personal
freedoms.
Hayek also wrote a well-known
critique of Galbraith in 1961,
addressing in
particular
Galbraith's view of advertising.
Hayek observed that advertising was
merely one
example
of a broader phenomenon: Many preferences
are created by the social
environment.
Literature,
art, and music are all
acquired tastes. A person's demand
for hearing a Mozart
concerto
may have been created in a
music appreciation class, but
this fact does not make
the
desire
less legitimate or the music
professor a sinister influence.
Hayek concluded, "It is
because
each individual producer
thinks that the consumers
can be persuaded to like
his
products
that he endeavors to influence them.
But though this effort is
part of the
influences
which
shape consumers' taste, no producer can
in any real sense
`determine' them."
Although
these two economists disagreed
about the roles of
advertising, markets, and
government,
they did have one thing in
common: great acclaim. In 1974,
Hayek won the
Nobel
prize
in economics. In 2000, President Clinton
awarded Galbraith the National
Medal of
Freedom.
And even though their
most famous works were
written many decades ago,
they are
still
well worth reading
today.
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