Encyclopedia > Ludwig Lachmann

  Article Content

Ludwig Lachmann

Ludwig Lachmann (1906 - 1990) a German economist who was an important contributor to the Austrian School.

Ludwig Lachmann was a student at the London School of Economics in the 1930s where he first became interested in the Austrian School. He later taught in Witwatersrand University[?] in South Africa.

He grew to believe that the Austrian School had deviated from Carl Menger's original vision of an entirely subjective economics. To Lachmann, Austrian Theory was to be characterized as an evolutionary, or "genetic-causal", approach against the stresses of equilibrium and perfect found in mainstream Neoclassical economics.

Lachmann's "fundamentalist Austrianism" was rare - few living Austrian economists saw their work as departing from the mainstream. His work stressed all the points he saw as distinctive from that mainstream: Economic subjectivism, uncertainty, the business cycle, methodological individualism, alternative cost and "market process".

His work was highly influential upon the later "American branch" of the Austrian School.

External Links



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Battle Creek, Michigan

... Hispanic or Latino of any race. There are 21,348 households out of which 32.3% have children under the age of 18 living with them, 41.9% are married couples livin ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 30.7 ms