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This PDF is a selection from an out-of-print volume from the National Bureau of Economic Research Volume Title: The Business Cycle in a Changing World Volume Author/Editor: Arthur F. Burns Volume Publisher: NBER Volume ISBN: 0-870-14200-3 Volume URL: http://www.nber.org/books/burn69-1 Publication Date: 1969 Chapter Title: Front matter, The Business Cycle in a Changing World Chapter Author: Arthur F. Burns Chapter URL: http://www.nber.org/chapters/c1173 Chapter pages in book: (p. -14-0)

Arthur F. Burns THE BUSINESS CYCLE in a CHANGING WORLD ESSAYS reprinted to honor Dr. Burns for his 38 years of active involvement in the research and administration of the National Bureau of Economic Research and on the occasion of his election as Honorary Chairman of the Bureau's Board of Directors. ft3 ER NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH New York 1969 DISTRIBUTED BY Columbia University Press New York and London

Copyright 1969 by National Bureau of Economic Research All Rights Reserved L. C. Card No. 69.12462 First Printing 1969 Second Printing 1974 Printed in the United States of America

NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH STUDIES IN BUSINESS CYCLES 1. Business Cycles: The Problem and Its Setting WESLEY C. MITCHELL 2. Measuring Business Cycles ARTHUR F. BURNS AND WESLEY C. MITCHELL 3. American Transportation in Prosperity and Depression THOR HULTGREN 4. Inventories and Business Cycles, with Special Reference to Manufacturer? Inventories MOSES ABRAMOVn-L 5. What Happens during Business Cycles: A Progress Report WESLEY C. MITCHELL 6. Personal income during Business Cycles DANIEL CREAMER WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF MARTIN BERNSTEIN 7. Consumption and Business Fluctuations: A Case Study of the Shoe, Leather, Hide Sequence RUTH P. MACK 8. International Financial Transactions and Business Cycles OSKAR MORGENSTERN 9. Federal Receipts and Expenditures During Business Cycles, 1879 1958 JOHN M. FIRESTONE 10. Business Cycle Indicators: Volume I, Contributions to the Analysis of Current Business Conditions; Volume II, Basic Data on Cyclical Indicators EDITED BY GEOFFREY H. MOORE 11. Postwar Cycles in Manufacturer? Inventories THOMAS M. STANBACK, JR. 12. A Monetary History of the United States, 1867 1960 MILTON FRIEDMAN AND ANNA J. SCHWARTZ 13. Determinants and Effects of Changes in the Stock of Money, 1875 1960 PHILLIP CACAN 14. Cost, Prices, and Profits: Their Cyclical Relations ThOR HULTGREN 15. Cyclical Fluctuations in the Exports of the United States Since 1879 ILSE MINTZ 16. Informaèion, Expectations, and Inventorzj Fluctuation: A Study of Materials Stock on Hand and on Order RUTH P. MACK 17. The Business Cycle in a Changing World: A Collection 6/ Essays ARTHUR F. BURNS

RELATION OF THE DIRECTORS TO THE WORK AND PUBLICATIONS OF THE NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH 1. The object of the National Bureau of Economic Research is to ascertain and to present to the public important economic facts and their interpretation in a scientific and impartial manner. The Board of Directors is charged with the responsibility of ensuring that the work of the National Bureau is carried on in strict conformity with this object. 2. The President of the National Bureau shall submit to the Board of Directors, or to its Executive Committee, for their formal adoption all specific proposals for research to be instituted. 3. No research report shall be published until the President shall have submitted to each member of the Board the manuscript proposed for publication, and such information as will, in his opinion and in the opinion of the author, serve to determine the suitability of the report for publication in accordance with the principles of the National Bureau. Each manuscript shall contain a summary drawing attention to the nature and treatment of the problem studied, the character of the data and their utilization in the report, and the main conclusions reached. 4. For each manuscript so submitted, a special committee of the Board shall be appointed by majority agreement of the President and Vice Presidents (or by the Executive Committee in case of inability to decide on the part of the President and Vice Presidents), consisting of three directors selected as nearly as may be one from each general division of the Board. The names of the

special manuscript committee shall be stated to each Director when the manuscript is submitted to him. It shall be the duty of each member of the special manuscript committee to read the manuscript. If each member of the manuscript committee signifies his approval within thirty days of the transmittal of the manuscript, the report may be published. If at the end of that period any member of the manuscript committee withholds his approval, the President shall then notify each member of the Board, requesting approval or disapproval of publication, and thirty days additional shall be granted for this purpose. The manuscript shall then not be published unless at least a majority of the entire Board who shall have voted on the proposal within the time fixed for the receipt of votes shall have approved. 5. No manuscript may be published, though approved by each member of the special manuscript committee, until forty-five days have elapsed from the transmittal of the report in manuscript form. The interval is allowed for the receipt of any memorandum of dissent or reservation, together with a brief statement of his reasons, that any member may wish to express; and such memorandum of dissent or reservation shall be published with the manuscript if he so desires. Publication does not, however, imply that each member of the Board has read the manuscript, or that either members of the Board in general or the special committee have passed on its validity in every detail. 6. Publications of the National Bureau issued for informational purposes concerning the work of the Bureau and its staff, or issued to inform the public of activities of Bureau staff, and volumes issued as a result of various conferences involving the National Bureau shall contain a specific disclaimer noting that such publicalion has not passed through the normal review procedures required in this resolution. The Executive Committee of the Board is charged with review of all such publications from time to time to ensure that they do not take on the character of formal research reports of the National Bureau, requiring formal Board approval. 7. Unless otherwise determined by the Board or exempted by the terms of paragraph 6, a copy of this resolution shall be printed in each National Bureau publication. (Resolution adopted October 25, 1926, and revised February 6, 1933, February 24, 1941, and April 20, 1968)

NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH OFFICERS Arthur F. Bums, Honorary Chairman Theodore 0. Yntema, Chairman Walter W. Heller, Vice Chairman John R. Meyer, President Donald B. Woodward, Treasurer Victor R. Fuchs, Vice President- Research F. Thomas Juster, Vice President- Research Douglas H. Eldridge, Vice President-Administration Hal B. Law, Director of International Studies Donald S. Shoup, Director of Research Services and Planning Joseph A. Beirne, Communications Workers of America Wallace J. CampbeU, Foundation for Cooperative Housing Erwin D. Canham, Christian Science Monitor Robert A. Charpie, The Cabot Corporation Solomon Fabricant, New York University Frank W. Fetter, Hanover, New Hampshire Eugene P. Foley, Dreyfus Corporation Marion B. Folsom, Rochester, New York Eli Goldston, Eastern Gas and Fuel Associates Crawford H. Greenewalt, E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Company Gabriel Hauge, Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company DIRECTORS AT LABCE Walter W. Heller, University of Minnesota Vivian W. Henderson, Clark College Albert J. Hettinger, Jr., Lazard Frères and Company John R. Meyer, Yale University J. Irwin Miller, Cummins Engine Company, inc. Geoffrey H. Moore, Bureau of Labor Statistics J. Wilson Newman, Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. Robert V. Roosa, Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. Boris Shishkin, AFL-CIO Gus Tyler, ILGWU Donald B. Woodward, Riverside, Connecticut Theodore 0. Ynterna, Oakland University

DIRECTORS BY UNIVERSITY APPOINTMENT Moses Abramovitz, Stanford Charles H. Berry, Princeton Francis M. Boddy, Minnesota Arthur F. Burns, Columbia Tom E. Davis, Cornell Otto Eckstein, Harvard Walter D. Fisher, Northwestern B. A. Cordon, California Douglas C. Harfie, Toronto Robert J. Larnpman, Wisconsin Maurice W. Lee, North Carolina Lloyd C. Reynolds, Yale Robert M. Solow, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Henri Theil, Chicago Willis J. Wftw, Pennsylvania DIRECTORS BY APPOINTMENT OF OTHER ORGANIZATIONS Emilio C. Collado, Committee for Economic Development Thomas D. Flynn, American Institute of Certified Public Accourztants Nathaniel Coldfinger, AFL-CIO Harold G. Halerow, American Agricultural Economics Association Walter E. Hoadley, American Finance Association Douglass C. North, Economic History Association Murray Shields, American Management Association George Cline Smith, National Association of Business Economists Willard L. Thorp, American Economic Association W. Allen Walks, American Statistical Association Percival F. Brundage Harold M. Groves Cottfried Haberler DIBEc'rOBS EMERiTI Harry W. Laidiler George B. Roberts Harry Scherman George Soule Jacob Viner Joseph H. Willits Moses Abramovitz Gary S. Becker Arthur F. Burns (on leave) Phiffip Cagan Alfred H. Conrad James S. Earley Solomon Fabricant Milton Friedman Victor R. Fuchs SENIOR RESEARCH STAVE Raymond W. Goldsmith Jack M. Guttentag Daniel M. Holland F. Thomas Juster C. Harry Kahn John W. Kendrick Irving B. Kravis Hal B. Lary Robert E. Lipsey Jacob Mincer use Mintz Geoffrey H. Moore (on leave) Nancy Ruggles Richard Ruggles Robert P. Shay George J. Stigler Victor Zarnowitz

Acknowledgments I owe the publication of this volume to the urging of two friends Gottiried Haberler and Geoffrey Moore. I cud not give my consent quickly. But when I finally agreed, I did so with the conviction that even a coilection of scattered essays such as this may convey something of the spirit that has long marked the National Bureau's effort to inform public policy through the disinterested study of business cycles. The present essays are concerned with the business cycle in our rapidly changing world. They were written during a stage of life when, finding myself heavily engaged in administrative work and public affairs, I took advantage of special occasions to sum up or draw upon my scientific studies. All were written in the unique environment for business-cycle research that my revered Mend and teacher, Wesley Clair Mitchell, created nearly fifty years ago, at the National Bureau. All therefore bear the imprint of his thinking and that of my other colleagues particularly Moses Abramovitz, Solomon Fabricant, Milton Friedman, Ruth Mack, Geoffrey Moore, Aniia Schwartz, and Leo Wolman as well as my own labors. I acknowledge with gratitude the debt of learning and fellowship I owe to each of them, and also to my devoted assistants across the years Irving Forman, Jane Kennedy, Edward Kilberg, Joyce Rose, Sophie Sakowitz, Louise Smith, and Johanna Stem.

xii Acknowledgments These resurrected essays are presented as they were originally published, except for a few minor stylistic changes and several deletions to avoid any mischievous crossing of the boundary line between economic diagnosis and policy prescription. Mrs. Joan Tron assumed full responsibility for all printing arrangements and Mrs. Rose helped with the proofs. I extend my thanks to them and also to the original publishers who generously consented to the reprinting. April, 28, 1969 Arthur F. Burns

Foreword The essays in this volume draw upon the research and thinking of an economist who has devoted his life to study of the nature and causes of prosperity and depression. The first essay, written originally for the new International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences, captures the essence of the phenomenon of the business cycle as we now know it. The other essays illuminate that sketch, by illustrating more specifically many of its propositions and findings. Arthur Burns has put his knowledge to the hard test of formulating business-cycle policies at the highest levels of responsibility in government. As Chairman of President Eisenhower's Council of Economic Advisers from 1953 to 1956, and as counselor to both the Executive and Legislative branches of the Federal Government since then, he has had to diagnose and to recommend. The essays in this book, therefore, represent a distillation of the factual information and insights that he brought with him to this task, as well as what he learned from it, and hence have many implications for policy. But they do not include Bums' many writings on the course he believed government should currently pursue. Thus the book seeks to diagnose, interpret, and report upon economic problems, but in keeping with the National Bureau's tradition it avoids recommending specific courses of action by

xiv Foreword government, business, trade unions, or any other social groups. Indeed, the reader will observe, I believe, that the book is itself a tribute to the value and practicability of subjecting economic policies to scientific scrutiny. For it demonstrates that one intensely concerned with policy can also write objectively and dispassionately about the factors that have, over a long history, brought about inflation or depression, rapid growth or economic sluggishness. It is a tribute as well to the scientific and scholarly qualifies of the author. While the reader, therefore, will not find here a specific policy pronouncement on how to achieve rapid economic growth and a high level of employment without inflation, he will become better educated about the factors that need to be considered in shaping policy toward this goal. This in fact was the fundamental purpose of a grant made to the National Bureau by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation in 1964, which has been drawn upon to finance the publication of this report. It is a privilege to write the foreword to a book that goes so far to achieve this purpose. Geoffrey H. Moore

Contents Acknowledgments xi Foreword by Geoffrey H. Moore xm The Nature and Causes of Business Cycles 3 rwo. New Facts on Business Cycles 54 THREE. Progress Towards Economic Stability 101 Dealing with Recession and Inflation 129 FIvE. The New Environment of Monetary Policy 151 six. Economics and Our Public Policy of Full Employment 175 SEVEN. The Problem of Unemployment 200 ncm2. Aggregate or Structural Approaches to Full Employment 221 Nuca Wages and Prices by Formula 232 TEN. The Quest for Full Employment and Economic Stability: 1960 1966 254 TwELvE. THIRTEEN. The Perils of Inflation 286 Heller's "New Dimensions of Political Economy 303 Economic and Social Impact of the Defense Sector 313 Index 337

Tables and Charts TABLE 1.1. A Partial Chronology of Business Cycles 16 TABLE 2.1. Characteristic Direction and Amplitude of Twenty-Six "Comprehensive" Series During a Business Cycle 76 CHART 1.1. Production, Prices, and Employment in the United States, 1919 65 18 CHART 2.1. Distribution of Turning Points of Specific Cycles in a Sample of over 600 Economic Time Series, 1919 39 57 CHART 2.2. Percentage of Series Undergoing Cyclical Expansion and Their Cumulative, 1919 39, Based on Sample of over 600 Economic Time Series CHART 2.3. Simple Aggregate of Specific Cycles in over 600 Economic Time Series, Industrial Production, Factory Employment, and Freight Car Loadings, 1919 39 63 CHART 2.4. Percentage of Series Undergoing Cyclical Expansion, Three Groups of Series, 1919 39 65 CHART 2.5. Percentage of Series Undergoing Cyclical Expansion, Moore's Sample of Well-Conforming Series, 1885 1939 66 CHART 2.6. Simple Aggregates of Specific Cycles in Three Groups of Series, 1919 39 73 CHART 2.7. Corporate Profits and Related Movements, 1920 38 80 CHART 2.8. Simple Aggregates of Specific Cycles in Two Groups of Series Differentiated by Their Cyclical Timing, 1919 39 86