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The
adverse economic events following the First World War turned me toward
economics. In the Dakotas, where I was born (April 30, 1902), I learned
during my youth how hard it was for farm families to stay solvent. Farm
product prices fell abruptly by more than half. Banks went bankrupt and
many farmers suffered foreclosures. Was politics or economics to blame?
I opted for economics.
My schooling was disrupted by the shortage of labor during World War I.
It meant foregoing high school. Then, late in 1921, I entered upon a short
course in agriculture at South Dakota State College. I managed to enter
college in 1924 and I was permitted to complete my college work in three
years. The unorthodox economics of the University of Wisconsin during
those years appealed to me. Despite my lack of proper credentials I was
accepted by the graduate school. My intellectual debt to Professors Commons,
Hibbard, Perlman and Wehrwein is large.
My professional apprenticeship at Iowa State College from 1930 to 1943
could not have been better; the Great Depression made it so and the talented
younger economists at Ames during that period made it an exciting and
profitable intellectual experience. The opportunity to consolidate and
interpret that experience has been ideal for me at the University of Chicago,
where I have been since 1943.
In retrospect, I
value highly what I have learned about the economic behavior of rural
people while abroad. During the summer of 1929, I acquired location- specific
information in parts of the Soviet Union. In 1960 when I was president
of the American Economic Association, several U.S. economists and I were
guests of the Soviet Academy of Sciences. It was a grand opportunity to
return to the same locations about which I had acquired information in
1929. Over the years, I have ventured frequently into many low income
countries to do what I did in the Soviet Union. In general, I avoided
giving lectures or attaching myself while abroad to a university. To learn
what I wanted to know, I went instead to rural communities and onto actual
farms. Talk with university people, government officials and U.S. personnel
stationed in the country was much less rewarding for me.
In addition, and
beyond this, there is the standard puffing vita.
From Nobel Lectures
, Economic Sciences 1969-1980.
Theodore W. Schultz
died on February 26, 1998.
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