Lars Jonung
Professor emeritus
Hayek-Myrdal Interactions in the Early 1930s: New Facts Change an Old Story
Author
Summary, in English
It is widely believed that Friedrich Hayek's first encounter with Gunnar Myrdal involved the latter's last-minute contribution, as a replacement for Erik Lindahl, to a Sammelband edited by the former in 1933, and that Hayek was lukewarm toward Myrdal and his ideas from the very beginning. Correspondence between the two shows that, in fact, their interaction about this contribution began two years earlier and that their relationship was cooperative and cordial prior to its publication. We suggest that it was the content, and in particular the tone, of Myrdal's 1933 paper, originally intended for the Journal of Political Economy, that alienated Hayek, who nevertheless treated Myrdal's work with academic propriety thereafter. In the course of our discussion, new light is also thrown on the origins of Myrdal's famous ex post–ex ante terminology.
Department/s
- Department of Economics
Publishing year
2026-02-01
Language
English
Publication/Series
History of Political Economy
Volume
58
Issue
1
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Duke University Press
Topic
- Economics
Keywords
- Hayek
- Myrdal
- Stockholm school
- ex ante–ex post
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1527-1919