2
ECONOMIC ESSAYS IN HONOR OF JOHN BATES CLARK
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with Clark is organic relation rather than objective coincidence.
In 1876 Dunbar had admitted, “The United States have thus
far done nothing toward developing the theory of political
economy,” and four years later Cliffe Leslie had particularized:
“American political economy is in the main an importation from
Europe, not an original development.” But the extraordinary
changes in American economic organization were already begin-
ning to exert influence. A new spirit of realistic study of sur-
rounding phenomena was becoming manifest, with an accompany-
ing reflex of doctrinal controversies then raging among English
economists.
More notable than these factors was the return to the United
States in the early eighties of a remarkable company of young
scholars from post-graduate study in German universities. Their
arrival and activity effected a virtual renascence in American
economic thought. With others trained in this country lodgment
was found in leading universities; student bodies gathered, and
productive scholarship developed.
The dominant characteristics of the group were an avowal of
the historical inductive method, and an election in the main of
concrete problems for inquiry. At Harvard, Taussig traced the
growth and influence of American protectionism; at Yale, Hadley
concerned himself with railway transportation, and Farnam with
social problems; at Columbia, Seligman studied the theory and
practice of public finance and Mayo-Smith pursued statistical
inquiries; at Johns Hopkins, Ely made pioneer studies of local
taxation and of the labor movement; at Pennsylvania, James
studied municipal economics and at Michigan, H. C. Adams
became identified with fiscal studies. A “statement of principles”
proposed and accepted in the formation of the American Eco-
nomic Association at Saratoga in 1885 as “a general indication
of the views and the purposes” of the founders contained the
declaration: “While we appreciate the work of former economists,
we look not so much to speculation as to the historical and
statistical study of actual conditions of economic life” for the
further development of political economy. 5
In the organization and early activity of the American
Economic Association the extreme “historical” tendency in
the United States spent itself. Stirred by militant challenge,
heartened by clearness of issue, supplied with convenient chan-