Walter Lippmann was the most distinguished American journalist
and public philosopher of the twentieth century. But he was also
something more: a public economist who helped millions of ordinary
citizens make sense of the most devastating economic depression in
history. Craufurd Goodwin offers a new perspective from which to
view this celebrated but only partly understood icon of American
letters.
From 1931 to 1946 Lippmann pursued a far-ranging correspondence
with leading economic thinkers: John Maynard Keynes, Lionel
Robbins, Friedrich Hayek, Henry Simons, Adolf Berle, Frank Taussig,
and others. Sifting through their divergent views, Lippmann formed
his own ideas about economic policy during the Great Depression and
shared them with a vast readership in his syndicated column, Today
and Tomorrow." Unemployment, monetary and fiscal policy, and the
merits and drawbacks of free markets were just a few of the issues
he helped explain to the public, at a time when professional
economists who were also skilled at translating abstract concepts
for a lay audience had yet to come on the scene.
After World War II Lippmann focused on foreign affairs but
revisited economic policy when he saw threats to liberal democracy.
In addition to pointing out the significance of the Marshall Plan
and the World Bank, he addressed the emerging challenge of
inflation and what he called the riddle of the Sphinx: whether
price stability and full employment could be achieved in an economy
with strong unions."
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