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  1. Wesley Clair Mitchell (* 5. August 1874 in Rushville, Illinois; † 29. Oktober 1948 in New York City, New York) war ein US-amerikanischer Ökonom . Inhaltsverzeichnis. 1 Leben. 2 Werk. 3 Ehrungen. 4 Schriften (Auswahl) 5 Weblinks. 6 Einzelnachweise. Leben. Mitchell kam früh in Kontakt mit Thorstein Veblen .

  2. Wesley Clair Mitchell (August 5, 1874 – October 29, 1948) was an American economist known for his empirical work on business cycles and for guiding the National Bureau of Economic Research in its first decades.

  3. died: Oct. 29, 1948, New York, N.Y. (aged 74) Subjects Of Study: business cycle. Wesley C. Mitchell (born Aug. 5, 1874, Rushville, Ill., U.S.—died Oct. 29, 1948, New York, N.Y.) was an American economist, the world’s foremost authority of his day on business cycles.

  4. WESLEY CLAIR MITCHELL, 1874-1948 AN APPRECIATION The death of Wesley Clair Mitchell brought to an end a lifetime of formative research, inspired scholarship, and earnest, continu- ous effort to apply scientific methods to social and economic prob- lems. The end was untimely not merely because it always comes too soon for those few useful and ...

  5. 7. Juli 2022 · Publish with us. Policies and ethics. Business cycles often begin with the work of Mr. Wesley Clair MitchellMitchell, Wesley, the first Director of Research at the National Bureau of Economic ResearchNational Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), NBER. Mr. MitchellMitchell, Wesley was elected the...

    • jguerard@mckinleycapital.com
  6. Wesley Clair Mitchell, 1874-1948. American Institutionalist at Columbia, leading researcher on business cycles and founder of the NBER . Originating from rural Illinois, Wesley Clair Mitchell enrolled at University of Chicago in 1896, initially to study classics, but ended up diverted into economics.

  7. 6. März 2018 · Wesley Mitchell’s Business Cycles (1913) was published just over a century ago. It is a neglected classic that should be recognized, as one contemporary noted, as the key economic text between Alfred Marshall’s Principles of Economics (1890) and John Maynard Keynes’s General Theory (1936).