Paul Sweezy

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Paul Sweezy bigraphy, stories - American economist

Paul Sweezy : biography

April 10, 1910 – February 27, 2004

Paul Marlor Sweezy (April 10, 1910 – February 27, 2004) was a Marxian economist, political activist, publisher, and founding editor of the long-running magazine Monthly Review. He is best remembered for his contributions to economic theory as one of the leading Marxian economists of the second half of the 20th century.

Footnotes

Biography

Early years and education

Monthly Review.

Sweezy attended Phillips Exeter Academy and went on to Harvard and was editor of The Harvard Crimson, graduating magna cum laude in 1932. Having completed his undergraduate coursework, his interests shifted from journalism to economics. Sweezy spent the 1931-32 academic year taking courses at the London School of Economics, traveling to Vienna to study on breaks. It was at this time that Sweezy was first exposed to Marxian economic ideas. He made the acquaintance of Joan Robinson and other young left-wing British economic thinkers of the day.

Upon his return to the United States, Sweezy again enrolled at Harvard, from which he received his doctorate degree in 1937. Sweezy was deeply impacted through his interaction with the economist Joseph Schumpeter, becoming fast friends for life with the conservative thinker. Later, as colleagues, their debates on the “Laws of Capitalism” were of legendary status for a generation of Harvard economists.John Bellamy Foster, Monthly Review.

While at Harvard, Sweezy founded the academic journal The Review of Economic Studies and published essays on imperfect competition, the role of expectations in the determination of supply and demand, and the problem of economic stagnation.

Academic career and military service

Sweezy became an instructor at Harvard in 1938. It was there that he helped establish a local branch of the American Federation of Teachers, the Harvard Teachers’ Union. In this interval also Sweezy wrote lectures that later became one of his most important works of economics, The Theory of Capitalist Development (1942), a book which summarized the labor theory of value of Marx and his followers. The book was the first in English to deal with such questions such as the transformation problem thoroughly.

Sweezy worked for several New Deal agencies analyzing the concentration of economic power and the dynamics of monopoly and competition. This research included the influential study for the National Resources Committee, “Interest Groups in the American Economy” which identified the eight most powerful financial-industrial alliances in US business.Michael A. Lebowitz, Monthly Review.

From 1942 to 1945, Sweezy worked for the research and analysis division of the Office of Strategic Services. Sweezy was sent to London, where he worked at the Research and Analysis section of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) monitoring British economic policy for the US government. He went on to edit the OSS ‘s monthly publication, European Political Report. Sweezy received the bronze star for his role in the war. He was the recipient of the Social Science Research Council Demobilization Award at war’s end.

Sweezy wrote extensively for the liberal press during the post-war period, including such publications as The Nation and The New Republic, among others. He also wrote a book, Socialism, published in 1949, as well as a number of shorter pieces which were collected in book form as The Present as History in 1953. In 1947 Sweezy quit his teaching position at Harvard, with two years remaining on his contract, to dedicate himself to full time writing and editing.

Monthly Review magazine

In 1949, Sweezy and Leo Huberman founded a new magazine called Monthly Review, using money from historian and literary critic F. O. Matthiessen. The first issue appeared in May of that year, and included Albert Einstein’s article “Why Socialism?”. The magazine, established in the midst of the American Red Scare, a self-described "independent socialist magazine."