Description
Temporarily out of stock
Title: Statistics and the German State, 1900-1945: The Making of Modern Economic Knowledge
Author: TOOZE, J. ADAM (JESUS COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE)
Format: PAPERBACK
Publication date: 16/08/2007
Imprint: CAMBRIDGE UNI PRESS
Price: $79.95
Publishing status: Active
Tooze provides an interpretation of the dramatic period of statistical innovation between 1900 and the end of World War II. At the turn of the century, virtually none of the economic statistics that we take for granted today were available. By 1944, the entire repertoire of modern economic statistics was being put to work in wartime economic management. As this book reveals, the Weimar Republic and the Third Reich were in the forefront of statistical innovation in the interwar decades. New ways of measuring the economy were inspired both by contemporary developments in macroeconomic theory and the needs of government. The Weimar Republic invested heavily in macroeconomic research. Under the Nazi regime, these statistical tools were to provide the basis for a radical experiment in economic planning. Based on the German example, this book presents the case for a more wide-ranging reconsideration of the history of modern economic knowledge.
Series: Cambridge Studies in Modern Economic History
ISBN: 9780521039123
Weight: 504g
Dimension: 228mm X 152mm
Pages: 336