ào zuòzhělièbiǎo
'ěr Rainer Maria Rilke 'ěr Georg Trakl lán Paul Celan
sài · 'ěr xiào Race Mi Mo Erxiaolǎo yuē hàn · shī láo Johann Straussxiǎo yuē hàn · shī láo Johann Strauss
méng · luò Sigmund Freud Franz Kafka fēn · wēi Stefan Zweig
'ěr Johannes Mario Simmelhàn - · dīng Hans-Peter Martinyuē · xióng Joseph Schumpeter
tuō · Thomas Brezina dào · tíng Rudolf Hilferding · Markus Zusak
ēn · yáng 'ěr Ernst Jandlxuē dìng 'ě Erwin Rudolf Josef Alexander Schrödinger 'ěr Walther von der Vogelweide
'ěr · luò Karl Krauslāi nǎo Nikolaus Lenau màn Ingeborg Bachmann
wéi gēn tǎn Ludwig Josef Johann Wittgensteināi gòng · Egon Schiele lāi mén · méi niè Klemens Wenzel von Metternich
yuē · xióng Joseph Schumpeter
ào lěng zhàn kāi shǐ  (1883niánèryuè8rì1950niányuányuè8rì)

jīng shāng Economics Shangqijīng zhǎn lùn

yuèdòuyuē · xióng Joseph Schumpeterzài百家争鸣dezuòpǐn!!!
约瑟夫·熊彼特
  yuē · xióng (JosephAloisSchumpeter, 1883 nián 2 yuè 8 -1950 nián 1 yuè 8 ), shì wèi yòu shēn yuǎn yǐng xiǎng de 'ào jīng xué jiā ( dàn bìng shì wèi ào xué pài de chéng yuán ), hòu měi guó zhí rèn jiào xué zhōng shēng kǎi 'ēn jiān de liàng qíng jié shì jīng xué yán jiū zhě zhōng de mén tǎo lùn suī rán de jīng xué shuō bìng kǎi 'ēn zài shēng qián jiù huò hěn de huí xiǎngdàn yán jiū zhě rèn wéi duì jīng xué de xiǎng shǐ yòu zhe hěn de gòng xiàn
  
  1883 niánxióng chū shēng 'ào xiōng guó wéi shěngjīn jié jìng nèi yòu rén yòu xióng kàn zuò měi jié rén zhèn de zhì chǎng zhù de jiā tíng yòu nián jiù xué wéi de guì zhōng xué
  
  1901 1906 nián wéi xuégōng jīng nǎi 'ào xué pài zhù yào dài biǎo rén páng wéi de mén dāng shí de tóng xué hǎo yǒu zhōng yòu hòu lái chéng wéi 'ào shè huì mín zhù dǎng lǐng dǎo rén de 'ào tuō · bào wēi 'ěr hòu lái chéng wéi guó shè huì mín zhù dǎng rén 'èr guó shǒu lǐng zhī de tíngdài hòu yóu xué lún dūnjiù jiào xiē 'ěrzhōng shēng gāo tuī chóng luò sāng xué pài de 'ěr shì jiè zhàn qián hòuxióng céng zhí jiào 'ào guó de xué
   yuē · xióng xué
  
  1918 nián céng chū rèn kǎo tíng děng rén lǐng dǎo de guó shè huì mín zhù dǎngshè huì huà wěi yuán huìde wèn
  
  1919 nián yòu duǎn chū rèn yóu 'ào tuō · bào wēi 'ěr děng rén wéi shǒu de 'ào shè huì mín zhù dǎng cān jiā chéng de 'ào guó hùn nèi de cái zhèng cháng
  
  1921 nián shì cóng shāngrèn yíng màn yínháng xíng cháng, 1924 nián yínháng chǎn de rén shòu qiān lián 'ér yòng cháng zhài
  
  1925 niánxióng yòu huí dào xué shù jièxiān yìng yāo běn rèn xué zuò jiào shòudàn jiǔ gǎi guó rèn 'ēn xué jiào shòuzhí dào 1931 nián yòu duǎn fǎng jiǎng xué
  
  1932 nián qiān měi guórèn xué jīng xué jiào shòuzhí dào 1950 nián chū shì shìxióng qiān měi hòujìn guǎn shēn jiǎn chūdàn réng cóng shì xué shù huó dòng
  
  1937 héng héng 1941 nián rènjīng jìliáng xué huìhuì cháng
  
  1948- 1949 nián rènměi guó jīng xué huìhuì cháng guǒ shì guò zǎo shì hái huì dān rèn xiān shāng dìng de jiāng chéng deguó jīng xué huì jiè huì cháng
   yuē · xióng - xué shuō zhù zhāng
  
  “ jǐng xún huán” - chēngshāng zhōu ” (Businesscycle) zhè shì xióng zuì cháng wéi hòu rén yǐn yòng de jīng xué zhù zhānggēn shuō lèi jǐng xún huánde zhù zhāng zǎo zài 19 shì de 1830 nián dài jiù bèi yīng guó jīng xué jiā (ThomasTooke) cǎi yòng shí dài de jīng xué shù chū guò liǎohòu lái zài zhòng yào de jīng xué jiā zhù zuò zhōng yědōu yuē lüè dào guò zhè gài niàn zài jiā xiē 'ěrpáng wéi gēn .... děng rén de zhù zuò zhōngxióng rèn wéi zhǐ guò shì jiāng jǐng xún huán de dìng zuò yòng gěi míng què zhǎn shì chū lái zhī rén 'ér
   yuē · xióng xióng jīng wēi lùn
  
  “ chuàng xīn” (Innovation)- jiāng yuán shǐ shēng chǎn yào chóngxīn pái liè wéi xīn de shēng chǎn fāng shì qiú gāo xiàolǜjiàng chéng běn de jīng guò chéngzài xióng jīng xíng zhōngnéng gòu chéng gōngchuàng xīnde rén biàn néng gòu bǎi tuō rùn jiǎn de kùn jìng 'ér shēng cún xià lái xiē néng gòu chéng gōng chóngxīn shēng chǎn yào zhī rén huì zuì xiān bèi shì chǎng táo tài
  
  “ běn zhù de chuàng zào xìng huài” (Thecreativedestructionofcapitalism)- dāng jǐng xún huán dào de tóng shí shì mǒu xiē jiā kǎo tuì chū shì chǎng huò shì lìng xiē jiā yàochuàng xīn qiú shēng cún de shí hòuzhǐ yào jiāng duō de jìng zhēng zhě shāi chú huò shì yòu xiē chéng gōng dechuàng xīnchǎn shēngbiàn huì shǐ jǐng shēngshēng chǎn xiàolǜ gāodàn shì dāng mǒu chǎn yòu chóngxīn shì yòu de shí hòu yòu huì yǐn xīn de jìng zhēng zhě tóu rán hòu yòu shì rùn jiǎn de guò chénghuí dào zhī qián de zhuàng tài ....。 suǒ shuō měi de xiāo tiáo bāo kuò zhù shù xīn de néngzhè huà fǎn guò lái chén shù wéi shù xīn de jiēguǒ biàn shì de xià xiāo tiáozài xióng kàn lái běn zhù de chuàng zào xìng huǐ miè xìng yīn shì tóng yuán dedàn xióng bìng rèn wéi běn zhù de yōu yuè xìng biàn shì yóu chǎn shēng de dòng jiāng 'ér tíng tuī dòng shēn zhǎn xiāng xìn běn zhù jīng zuì zhōng jiāng yīn wéi chéng shòu kuài péng zhàng dài lái de néng liàng 'ér bēng kuì shēn de guī
  
  “ jīng yīng mín zhù lùn” - huò chēng wéijīng yīng jìng zhēng shì mín zhù lùn”。 zài dài biǎo zuò běn zhù shè huì zhù mín zhù shū zhōngxióng cǎi yòng guó shǐ xué pài de lǎo chéng diào chū liǎo duì mín zhù lùn de guān chá zhù zhāng fāng liǎng bǎi nián jiān zhù yào de mín zhù lùn jiē jiàn zài zhēn shí de qián zhī shàng shuō zhè xiē mín zhù lùn jīng kǎo chá tóu piào rén shì fǒu yòu duì tóu piào nèi róng de zhuān rèn shí biàn wéi duō shù de jiàn yōu shǎo shù de jiàn rèn wéi zhè yàng de mín zhù xué shuō jǐn jǐn shì kōng xiǎng shì shí wán quán tuō jiégèng méi yòu zhēn shí chǎn shù zhèng quán de lái yuánxióng rèn wéi de kàn cái shì rén lèi shǐ jīng yàn demín zhù jǐn shì chǎn shēng zhì zhě de guò chéngér qiě hái shì yào guò chéng lùn rén mín cānyù mín zhù de chéng yòu duō shǎozhèng zhì quán shǐ zhōng dōushì zài jīng yīng jiē céng dāng zhōng zhuǎn ràng zhù zhāng běn zhù jiāng bēng shí yàngzhè liǎng zhù zhāng dōubèi rèn wéi shì shǐ zhù zhě de bēi guān lùn diǎn lùn xióng dejīng yīng jìng zhēng shì mín zhù lùnyǐn liǎo zhèng zhì xué zhě de guān zhù zhōng fǎn zhě duōlìng wài yòu rén jiāng xióng de xué shuō shè huì xué jiā liè dejīng yīng xún huánshuō bìng liè wéi jīng yīng zhèng zhì xué shuō de liǎng jīng diǎn
   yuē · xióng - chuàng xīn lùn
  
   jiā de běn zhì shì chuàng xīn
   yuē · xióng shù chuàng xīn
  
   xióng rèn wéichuàng xīn jiù shì jiàn zhǒng xīn de shēng chǎn hán shù jiù shì shuō zhǒng cóng lái méi yòu guò de guān shēng chǎn yào shēng chǎn tiáo jiàn dexīn yǐn rén shēng chǎn zhè zhǒng xīn bāo kuò 5 zhǒng qíng kuàng: (1) cǎi yòng zhǒng xīn chǎn pǐn huò zhǒng chǎn pǐn de xīn zhēng; (2) cǎi yòng zhǒng xīn de shēng chǎn fāng ; (3) kāipì xīn shì chǎng; (4) lüè huò kòng zhì yuán cái liào huò bàn zhì chéng pǐn de zhǒng xīn de gōng yìng lái yuán; (5) shí xiàn rèn zhǒng gōng de xīn de zhìyīn chuàng xīn shì shù gài niànér shì jīng gài niàn yán bié shù míngér shì xiàn chéng de shù xīn yǐn jīng zhìxíng chéng xīn de jīng néng
  
   xióng xīn de shí xiàn chēng wéi shí xiàn xīn wéi běn zhí néng de rén men chēng wéi jiāàn zhe de dìng jiā rén men yuán lái suǒ zhǐ de jiā zài nèi hán wài yán shàng yào zhǎi yòu yào kuān。“ guǎng xiēshì yīn wéi shǒu yào rén men suǒ jiào zuò de jiā jǐn bāo kuò zài jiāo huàn jīng zhōng tōng cháng suǒ chēng de de shēng rénér qiě bāo kuò suǒ yòu de shí shàng wán chéng rén men yòng lái gěi zhè gài niàn xià dìng de zhǒng zhí néng de rénjìn guǎn men shìxiàn zài zhú jiàn biàn chéng tōng jiā gōng de de yōng rén yuán jīng dǒng shì huì chéng yuán děng děnghuò zhě jìn guǎn men wán chéng jiā de zhí néng de shí quán yòu de chǔ kòng zhì fēn de quányóu shì shí xiàn xīn cái gòu chéng jiāsuǒ dìng yào tóng mǒu bié chǎng shāng yòu yǒng jiǔ de lián duō dejīn róng jiā’、‘ rénděng děng jiù shì tóng mǒu xiē chǎng shāng yòu yǒng jiǔ de lián dàn men réng rán shì rén men suǒ shuō de jiālìng fāng miànrén men de gài niàn chuán tǒng de gài niàn yào xiá xiē bìng bāo kuò chǎng shāng de suǒ yòu de tóu men huò jīng men huò gōng jiā men men zhǐ shì jīng yíng jīng jiàn lái de ér zhǐ shì bāo kuò shí xíng zhǒng zhí néng de rén men。” rén men yuán lái rèn wéi de jiābìng shì xióng shàng de jiāér yuán lái bèi dāng zuò jiā de shǔ xióng shàng de jiā rén zhǐ yòu dāng shí shàng shí xiànxīn shí cái shì jiā
  
   xióng hái rèn wéichōng dāng jiā bìng shì zhǒng zhí bān shuō shì zhǒng chí jiǔ de zhuàng kuàngsuǒ jiā bìng xíng chéng zhuān mén shàng jiǎng de jiē shuō:“ dàn dāng jiàn de hòu jiù shì dāng 'ān dìng xià lái jīng yíng zhè jiù xiàng de rén jīng yíng men de yàng de shí hòu jiù shī liǎo zhè zhǒng 。” yīn rén zài shēn zhōng hěn shǎo néng zǒng shì jiāqiě jiā de zhí néng běn shēn shì néng chéng de
  
   èr jiā shì tuī dòng jīng zhǎn de zhù
  
   xióng rèn wéizài méi yòu chuàng xīn de qíng kuàng xiàjīng zhǐ néng chǔyú zhǒng suǒ chēng wèi dexún huán liú zhuǎnde jūn héng zhuàng tàijīng zēngzhǎng zhǐ shì shù liàng de biàn huàzhè zhǒng shù liàng guān lùn lěiběn shēn bìng néng chuàng zào chū yòu zhì de fēi yuè dejīng zhǎn”。“ zài xíng shì de biān jiè wàiměi xíng dōuyòu kùn nán bāo hán xīn de yào zhèng shì zhè yào gòu chéng lǐng dǎo zhè xiàn xiàng。” zhè de lǐng dǎojiù shì shuài xiān chuàng xīn de jiāzhǐ yòu jiā shí xiàn chuàng xīn,“ chuàng zào xìng de huàijīng xún huán de guàn xíng guǐ dàotuī dòng jīng jié gòu cóng nèi jìn xíng mìng xìng de huàicái yòu jīng zhǎn
  
   xióng hái rèn wéichuàng xīn yǐn fǎng fǎng lǒng duàn liǎo guī de tóu yǐn jīng fán róngdāng chuàng xīn kuò zhǎn dào xiāng dāng duō de zhī hòuyíng huì xiāo shījīng kāi shǐ shuāi tuì dài xīn de chuàng xīn xíng wéi chū xiànzhěng jīng jiāng zài fán róngshuāi tuìxiāo tiáo jiē duàn gòu chéng de zhōu xìng yùn dòng guò chéng zhōng qián jìn shǒu xiān yòngchún shìlái jiě shì jīng zhōu de liǎng zhù yào jiē duàn héng héng fán róng shuāi tuì héng héng de jiāo chuàng xīn héng ( wéi chuàng xīn zhě ) dài lái chāo 'é rùn héng yǐn fǎng xiào héng chuàng xīn làng cháo héng duì yínháng xìn yòng běn pǐn de qiú héng jīng fán róngchuàng xīn de héng chāo 'é rùn xiāo shī héng duì yínháng xìn yòng běn pǐn de qiú héng jīng shōu suōyóu fán róng shuāi tuì
  
   duì jīng zhōu de jiē duànfán róngshuāi tuìxiāo tiáo xióng yòng chuàng xīn yǐn de 'èr làng cháolái jiě shì zhī chuàng xīn làng cháo héng duì yínháng xìn yòng běn pǐn de qiú héng shēng chǎn běn pǐn de mén kuò zhāng héng shēng chǎn xiāo fèi pǐn de mén kuò zhāng héng 'èr làng cháo héng jiàtóu huì↑, tóu xiàn xiàng chū xiànsuí zhe chuàng xīn de chāo 'é rùn xiāo shījīng jìn shuāi tuì 'èr làng cháo làng cháo yòu zhòng de chā bié 'èr làng cháo zhōng duō tóu huì běn mén de chuàng xīn guānzhè yàng 'èr làng cháo zhōng jǐn bāo hán liǎo chún shì cún zài de shī guò tóu xíng wéiér qiě yòu xíng tiáozhěng zǒu xiàng xīn jūn héng de néng yīn zài chún shì zhōngxīn de chuàng xīn yǐn jīng dòng cóng shuāi tuì zǒu xiàng fán róngér xiàn zài yóu 'èr làng cháo zuò yòngjīng cóng shuāi tuì zǒu xiàng xiāo tiáoxiāo tiáo shēng hòu 'èr làng cháo de fǎn yìng zhú jiàn xiāo chújīng zhuànxiàng yào shǐ jīng cóng jìn fán róng zài chū xiàn chuàng xīn
  
   xióng yòng sān duì xiāng yìng de máo dùn zuò wéi zhēng lái miáo shù liǎoxún huán liú zhuǎnguò chéng zhǎnguò chéng de bié liǎng zhēn shí guò chéng de duì fāng miànyòu xún huán liú zhuǎn huò zǒu xiàng jūn héng de shìlìng fāng miàn yòu xíng jīng shì dào zhōng de biàn huàhuò zhì nèi chǎn shēng de jīng shù zhōng de de biàn huà 'èrliǎng lùn gōng de duì jìng tài de dòng tài de sānliǎng lèi xíng dòng de duì gēn xiàn shírén men jiāng miáo huì wéi liǎng zhǒng lèi xíng de rén dān chún de jīng jiā
  
   sānchuàng xīn de zhù dòng lái jiā jīng shén
  
   xióng rèn wéiduì jiā cóng shìchuàng xīn xìng de huàigōng zuò de dòng rán shì jué qián zài rùn wéi zhí jiē mùdìdàn dìng chū rén cái zhì de wàng zhǐ chū jiā zhǐ xiǎng zuàn qián de tōng shāng rén huò tóu zhě tóng rén zhì chōng liàng jǐn shì fēn mùdìér zuì chū de dòng lái rén shí xiànde xīn jiā jīng shén”。 xióng rèn wéi jiā jīng shénbāo kuò
  
  1、 jiàn rén wáng guó jiā jīng chángcún zài yòu zhǒng mèng xiǎng zhìyào zhǎo dào rén wáng guócháng cháng shì wáng cháo。” duì méi yòu huì huò shè huì míng wàng de rén lái shuō de yǐn yòu shì bié qiáng liè de
  
  2、 duì shèng de qíng jiācún zài yòu zhēng de zhìzhàn dǒu de chōng dòngzhèng míng bié rén yōu yuè de chōng dòng qiú chéng gōng jǐn shì wèile chéng gōng de guǒ shíér shì wèile chéng gōng běn shēn。” rùn jīn qián shì yào de kǎo ér shìzuò wéi chéng gōng de zhǐ biāo shèng de xiàng zhēng cái shòu dào shì”。
  
  3、 chuàng zào de yuè jiācún zài yòu chuàng zào de huān shì qíng zuò chéng de huān huò zhě zhǐ shì shī zhǎn rén néng zhì móu de huān zhè lèi suǒ zài de dòng rén men lèi xíng de rén xún zhǎo kùn nánwéi gǎi 'ér gǎi mào xiǎn wéi shì。” jiā shì diǎn xíng de fǎn xiǎng zhù zhě
  
  4、 jiān qiáng de zhì jiāzài shú de xún huán liú zhuǎn zhōng shì shùn zhe cháo liú yóu yǒng guǒ xiǎng yào gǎi biàn zhè zhǒng xún huán liú zhuǎn de dào jiù shì cháo liú yóu yǒngcóng qián de zhù xiàn zài biàn chéng liǎo guò shú de shù xiàn zài biàn chéng liǎo wèi zhī shù。”“ yào yòu xīn de lìng zhǒng zhì shàng de ,⋯⋯ wéi shè xiǎng dìng chū xīn de 'ér dǒubìng shè shǐ kàn zuò shì zhǒng zhēn zhèng de néng xìngér zhǐ shì yīcháng bái mèng。”
  
   chéng gōng de chuàng xīn jué jiā de zhì
   yuē · xióng xióng lùn
  
   xióng rèn wéi jiā de gōng zuò shìchuàng zào xìng de huài”。 ér 'ài chuàng xīn de yīn yòu shì xìn chōng fēn tiáo jiàn xià duō shì qíng chǔyú zhī de zhuàng tài。“ shí xiàn xīn jìhuà gēn guàn de jìhuà xíng dòngshì liǎng jiàn tóng de shì qíngjiù xiàng jiàn zào tiáo gōng yán zhe gōng xíng zǒu shì liǎng jiàn tóng de shì qíng yàng。” 'èrshì rén de duò xìng。“ zuò wéi zhǒng xīn de shì qíng jǐn zài guān shàng zuò jīng shú de jīng yóu jīng yàn jiǎn dìng de shì qíng gèng jiā kùn nánér qiě rén huì gǎn dào yuàn zuò shǐ guān shàng de kùn nán bìng cún zài hái shì gǎn dào yuàn 。” sānshì shè huì huán jìng de fǎn zuò yòngzhè zhǒng fǎn zuò yòng shǒu xiān zài shàng huò zhèng zhì shàng cún zài zhàng 'ài 'ér biǎo xiàn chū lái zài shòu dào chuàng xīn wēi xié de tuán zhōng biǎo xiàn chū láizài zài nán zhǎo dào yào de zuò shàng biǎo xiàn chū láizuì hòu shì zài nán yíng xiāo fèi zhě shàng biǎo xiàn chū lái
  
   xióng rèn wéi jiā yào jìn xíng chuàng xīn shǒu xiān yào jìn xíng guān niàn gēngxīnzhè shì yīn wéi qiē zhī shí guàn dàn huò hòujiù láo zhí gēn rén men zhī zhōngjiù xiàng tiáo tiě de zhí gēn miàn shàng yàng yào qiú bèi duàn gēngxīn jué zài shēng chǎnér shì shēn shēn chén luò zài xià shí de céng zhōng tōng cháng tōng guò chuánjiào péi yǎng huán jìng jīhū shì méi yòu chuán xià 。”
  
   jiā bèi dìng de néng zhè xiē néng bāo kuò: 1、 néng jiā yìng yòujìn guǎn zài dāng shí néng kěn dìng 'ér hòu zhèng míng wéi zhèng què de fāng shì guān chá shì qíng de néng jìn guǎn néng shuō míng zhè yàng zuò suǒ gēn de yuán ér què néng zhǎng zhù yào de shì shípāo fēi zhù yào de shì shí de néng ,” néng zhuā zhù yǎn qián huì jué shì chǎng zhōng cún zài de qián zài rùn。 2、 zhì néng jiā jǐn zài zhǎo dào huò chuàng zào xīn de shì ér zài yòng shì shè huì tuán liú xià shēn de yìn xiàngcóng 'ér dài dòng shè huì tuán gēn zài hòu miàn zǒu。” shàn dòng yuán zhì shè huì yuán jìn xíng bìng shí xiàn shēng chǎn yào xīn 。 3、 shuō néng jiā shàn shuō rén menshǐ men xiāng xìn zhí xíng de jìhuà de néng xìngzhù zhòng xìn rèn shuō yínháng jiā gōng běnshí xiàn shēng chǎn fāng shì xīn
  
   dāng ránzài xióng kàn lái jiā shì chéng dān fēng xiǎn dezhè shì yīn wéi jiā jìn xíng chuàng xīn huó dòng suǒ yào de běn shì yóu xiē chéng gōng de jiā suǒ xíng chéng de běn jiā jiē céng gōng de běn shì chǎng gōng de jiā cóng běn shì chǎng huò men yào de rèn shù liàng de běnyīn 'ér běn bìng gòu chéng chéng wéi jiā de yuē shù tiáo jiàn xiāng duì yìngyóu běn de wài lái xìngfēng xiǎn yóu běn suǒ yòu zhě chéng dān jiā bìng chéng dān fēng xiǎn
  
   xìn yòng zhì shì jiā shí xiàn chuàng xīn de jīng tiáo jiàn
  
   yóu chuàng xīn lái nèi xīn de shí xiànjiù wèi zhe duì jīng zhōng xiàn yòu shēng chǎn shǒu duàn de gōng yìng zuò tóng de shǐ yòngzhī pèi shēng chǎn shǒu duàn duì zhí xíng xīn shì yào deyínháng jiā tōng guò gōng xìn yòngxiàng jiā dài kuǎnzhèng hǎo jiù yuán fàng zài jiā shǒu zhōng gōng yùn yòngzhè jiù shì yínháng jiā suǒ de gàng gān qiáo liáng zuò yòngér gōng xìn dài de rén biàn shì běn jiā lèi rén de zhí néngzài xióng kàn láisuǒ wèi běnjiù shì jiā wèile shí xiànxīn ”, yòng shēng chǎn zhǐ wǎng xīn fāng xiàng”、“ xiàng shēng chǎn yào yuán yǐn xiàng xīn yòng de zhǒng gàng gān kòng zhì shǒu duàn běn shì shāng pǐn de zǒng ér shì gōng jiā suí shí yòng de zhī shǒu duànshì jiā shāng pǐn shì jiè deqiáo liáng”, zhí néng zài wéi jiā jìn xíng chuàng xīn 'ér gōng yào de tiáo jiànyóu jiànxióng suǒ wèi de xìn yòngzhǐ de jiù shì jiā néng gòu 'àn zhào de zhì suí shí shǐ yòng de zhī shǒu duànhuàn huà shuōxìn yòng jiù shì zhuān wéi shí xiàn chuàng xīn wéi de de jiā 'ér chuàng shè de huò běnxìn yòng shǐ rén néng gòu zài mǒu zhǒng chéng shàng kào chéng de cái chǎn 'ér xíng shìyīn xìn yòng duì xīn de shì shǒu yào deér zhè zhǐ yòu zài běn zhù shè huì cái yòuxióng jìn fēn zhǐ chūdāng běn zhù jīng jìn xiāng duì jiē duàn zhī hòu běn shì chǎng de jiàn liáng hǎo yùn zhuǎn chéng wéi shí xiàn chuàng xīn de chǔ
   yuē · xióng - shēn hòu yǐng xiǎng
  
   bèi wéixiàn dài guǎn xué zhī de · (PeterDrucker) xiàng chéng rèn shēn shòu xióng de yǐng xiǎng
   yuē · xióng xióng yǐng xiǎng
   xióng tóng yàng qiáng diào jiā zàifán róngzhè mùdì shàng suǒ bàn yǎn de juésè běn jiā gèng wéi guān jiànbìng qiě gǎi liáng liǎo xióng duì jīng yīng de kàn gèng duō qiáng diào jīng yīng fèn de shè huì rènlìng wài tóng chuàng xīnbiàn shì shēng chǎn yào de chóngxīn pái lièqiě gēngshēn de pōu liǎo chuàng xīn de jià zhí wài zài duì pào jīng de guān chá zhōng kàn chū hěn míng xiǎn de xióng xué shuō yǐng xiǎng
  
  1931 nián xióng fǎng wèn běn bìng zuò liǎo sān chǎng duì jīng xué shēng de yǎn shuō xíng hòu duì běn wén míng liú xià fēi cháng měi hǎo de yìn xiàngzhè sān chǎng yǎn shuō hòu lái zhèng shí wéi xióng zài běn qīng nián jīng xué zhě xīn zhōng liú xià liǎo shēn de yìn xiàngyòu wèi dāng shí zuò zài tái xià de xué shēng hòu lái chéng wéi xióng xué shuō zài běn de xuān chuán rénhuí dào měi guó hòu de xióng duì xué jīng xué zhōng wèi lái běn de liú xué shēng bié guān 'ài zhōng shēng dōuhěn xīn shǎng běn wén huàjiù shì yīn wéi duì běn wén huà de yǒu shàn tài bìng zhè wèi xué shēng shēng duì lǎo shī de tuī chóngshǐ xióng zài běn de zhī míng gāo guò zài zhōu guó jiāzhè wèi xióng zài běn de tuī chóng zhě shì zhōng shān zhī láng ( 'áng xué shí xué shēng )、 dōng tián jīng ( tóng qián )、 liú zhòng rén ( xué shí xué shēng )、 gāo tián bǎo ( tīng jiǎng shí shì jīng xué zhě )。 zhè xiē rén yòu yǐng xiǎng liǎo hòu dài de jīng xué jiā yán yòu gēn jǐng hóng zhōng yán yòu shì qián běn gōng rèn de xióng yán jiū quán wēi
   yuē · xióng - zhù zuò shū
  
  《 jīng zhǎn lùn》 1911 nián biǎo wén bǎn 1912 nián yīng wén bǎn wèn shì
  
  《 jīng zhǎn lùn 'èr bǎn, 1926 niányòu zuò xiū gǎijiā shàng biāo zhě de rùn běnxìn dài jǐng xún huán
  
  《 jǐng xún huán lùn》 1939 nián chū bǎn
  
  《 běn zhù shè huì zhù mín zhù》 1942 nián chū bǎn
  
  《 jīng fēn shǐ》 1954 nián niǔ yuē chū bǎnxióng hòu yóu shuāng zhěng biǎo


  Joseph Alois Schumpeter (8 February 1883 – 8 January 1950) was an Austrian-American economist and political scientist. He popularized the term "creative destruction" in economics.
  
  Life
  
  Born in Třešť, Moravia (now Czech Republic, then part of Austria-Hungary) in 1883 to Catholic ethnic German parents, Schumpeter began his career studying law at the University of Vienna under the Austrian capital theorist Eugen von Böhm-Bawerk, taking his PhD in 1906. In 1909, after some study trips, he became a professor of economics and government at the University of Czernowitz. In 1911 he joined the University of Graz, where he remained until World War I. In 1919-1920, he served as the Austrian Minister of Finance, with some success, and in 1920-1924, as president of the private Biedermann Bank. That bank, along with a great part of that regional economy, collapsed in 1924 leaving Schumpeter bankrupt.
  
  From 1925-1932, he held a chair at the University of Bonn, Germany. He lectured at Harvard in 1927-1928 and 1930. Because of the rise of Nazism in Germany he moved to the United States where he would teach from 1932 until his death in 1950.
  
  During his Harvard years he was not generally considered a good classroom teacher, but he acquired a school of loyal followers. His prestige among colleagues was likewise not very high because his views seemed outdated and not in synch with the then-fashionable Keynesianism. This period of his life was characterized by hard work but little recognition of his core ideas.
  
  Although Schumpeter encouraged some young mathematical economists and was even the president of the Econometric Society (1940–41), Schumpeter was not a mathematician but rather an economist and tried instead to integrate sociological understanding into his economic theories. From current thought it has been argued that Schumpeter's ideas on business cycles and economic development could not be captured in the mathematics of his day - they need the language of non-linear dynamical systems to be partially formalized.
  
  Schumpeter claimed that he had set himself three goals in life: to be the greatest economist in the world, to be the best horseman in all of Austria and the greatest lover in all of Vienna. He said he had reached two of his goals, but he never said which two. Although, he is reported to have said that there were too many fine horseman in Austria for him to succeed in all his aspirations! (P.A. Samuelson and W.D. Nordhaus, Economics (1998, p. 178)
  
   Most important work
   This article may be confusing or unclear to readers. Please help clarify the article; suggestions may be found on the talk page. (March 2009)
  
   Evolutionary economic
  Main article: Evolutionary economic
  
   History of Economic Analysi
  
  Schumpeter's scholarship is apparent in his posthumous History of Economic Analysis, although some of his judgments seem idiosyncratic and sometimes cavalier. For instance, Schumpeter thought that the greatest 18th century economist was Turgot, not Adam Smith, as many consider, and he considered Léon Walras to be the "greatest of all economists", beside whom other economists' theories were "like inadequate attempts to catch some particular aspects of Walrasian truth". Schumpeter criticized John Maynard Keynes and David Ricardo for the "Ricardian vice." According to Schumpeter, Ricardo and Keynes reasoned in terms of abstract models, where they would freeze all but a few variables. Then they could argue that one caused the other in a simple monotonic fashion. This led to the belief that one could easily deduce policy conclusions directly from a highly abstract theoretical model.
  
   Business cycle
  
  Schumpeter's relationships with the ideas of other economists were quite complex in his most important contributions to economic analysis - the theory of business cycles and development. Following neither Walras nor Keynes, Schumpeter starts in The Theory of Economic Development with a treatise of circular flow which, excluding any innovations and innovative activities, leads to a stationary state. The stationary state is, according to Schumpeter, described by Walrasian equilibrium. The hero of his story, though, is, in fine Austrian fashion, the entrepreneur.
  Economic Waves serie
  
  (see Business cycles)
  Cycle/Wave Name Year
  Kitchin inventory 3–5
  Juglar fixed investment 7–11
  Kuznets infrastructural investment 15–25
  Kondratiev wave 45–60
  
  The entrepreneur disturbs this equilibrium and is the prime cause of economic development, which proceeds in cyclic fashion along several time scales. In fashioning this theory connecting innovations, cycles, and development, Schumpeter kept alive the Russian Nikolai Kondratiev's ideas on 50-year cycles, Kondratiev waves.
  
  Schumpeter suggested a model in which the four main cycles, Kondratiev (54 years), Kuznets (18 years), Juglar (9 years) and Kitchin (about 4 years) can be added together to form a composite waveform. (Actually there was considerable professional rivalry between Schumpeter and Kuznets. The wave form suggested here did not include the Kuznets Cycle simply because Schumpeter did not recognize it as a valid cycle[clarification needed]. See "Business Cycle" for further information.) A Kondratiev wave could consist of three lower degree Kuznets waves. Each Kuznets wave could, itself, be made up of two Juglar waves. Similarly two (or three) Kitchin waves could form a higher degree Juglar wave. If each of these were in phase, more importantly if the downward arc of each was simultaneous so that the nadir of each was coincident it would explain disastrous slumps and consequent depressions. (As far as the segmentation of the Kondratiev Wave, Schumpeter never proposed such a fixed model. He saw these cycles varying in time - although in a tight time frame by coincidence - and for each to serve a specific purpose)
  
   Schumpeter and Keynesianism
  
  Unlike Keynes, in Schumpeter's theory, Walrasian equilibrium is not adequate to capture the key mechanisms of economic development. Schumpeter also thought that the institution enabling the entrepreneur to purchase the resources needed to realize his or her vision was a well-developed capitalist financial system, including a whole range of institutions for granting credit. One could divide economists among (1) those who emphasized "real" analysis and regarded money as merely a "veil" and (2) those who thought monetary institutions are important and money could be a separate driving force. Both Schumpeter and Keynes were among the latter. Nevertheless, Schumpeter rejected Keynesianism.
  
   Schumpeter and capitalism's demise
  
  Schumpeter's most popular book in English is probably Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy. This book opens with a treatment of Karl Marx. While he is sympathetic to Marx's theory that capitalism will collapse and will be replaced by socialism, Schumpeter concludes that this will not come about in the way Marx predicted. To describe it he borrowed the phrase "creative destruction", and made it famous by using it to describe a process in which the old ways of doing things are endogenously destroyed and replaced by new ways.
  
  Schumpeter's theory is that the success of capitalism will lead to a form of corporatism and a fostering of values hostile to capitalism, especially among intellectuals. The intellectual and social climate needed to allow entrepreneurship to thrive will not exist in advanced capitalism; it will be replaced by socialism in some form. There will not be a revolution, but merely a trend in parliaments to elect social democratic parties of one stripe or another. He argued that capitalism's collapse from within will come about as democratic majorities vote for restrictions upon entrepreneurship that will burden and destroy the capitalist structure, but also emphasizes non-political, evolutionary processes in society where "liberal capitalism" was evolving into democratic socialism because of the growth of workers' self-management, industrial democracy and regulatory institutions. Schumpeter emphasizes throughout this book that he is analyzing trends, not engaging in political advocacy. In his vision, the intellectual class will play an important role in capitalism's demise. The term "intellectuals" denotes a class of persons in a position to develop critiques of societal matters for which they are not directly responsible and able to stand up for the interests of strata to which they themselves do not belong. One of the great advantages of capitalism, he argues, is that as compared with pre-capitalist periods, when education was a privilege of the few, more and more people acquire (higher) education. The availability of fulfilling work is however limited and this, coupled with the experience of unemployment, produces discontent. The intellectual class is then able to organize protest and develop critical ideas.
  
   Schumpeter and democratic theory
  
  In the same book, Schumpeter expounded a theory of democracy which sought to challenge what he called the "classical doctrine". He disputed the idea that democracy was a process by which the electorate identified the common good, and politicians carried this out for them. He argued this was unrealistic, and that people's ignorance and superficiality meant that in fact they were largely manipulated by politicians, who set the agenda. This made a 'rule by the people' concept both unlikely and undesirable. Instead he advocated a minimalist model, much influenced by Max Weber, whereby democracy is the mechanism for competition between leaders, much like a market structure. Although periodic votes by the general public legitimize governments and keep them accountable, the policy program is very much seen as their own and not that of the people, and the participatory role for individuals is usually severely limited.
  
   Schumpeter and entrepreneurship
  
  The research of entrepreneurship owes a lot to his contributions. He was probably the first scholar to develop its theories. He gave two theories, sometimes called Mark I and Mark II. In the first one, the early one, Schumpeter argued that the innovation and technological change of a nation comes from the entrepreneurs, or wild spirits. He coined the word Unternehmergeist, German for entrepreneur-spirit. He believed that these individuals are the ones who make things work in the economy of the country. In Mark II, expanded as professor at Harvard, he asserted that the actors that drive innovation and the economy are big companies which have the resources and capital to invest in research and development. Both arguments might be complementary today.
  
  The English literature uses the term entrepreneurship, from the French "entreprise". When studying entrepreneurship and Schumpeter, it is helpful to keep in mind he used the German term (Unternehmergeist), acknowledging these "fiery souls" or "spirits".
  
   Schumpeter and Innovation
  
  Schumpeter identified innovation as the critical dimension of economic change. He argued that economic change revolves around innovation, entrepreneurial activities and market power and sought to prove that innovation-originated market power could provide better results than the invisible hand & price competition. He argues that technological innovation often creates temporary monopolies, allowing abnormal profits that would soon be competed away by rivals and imitators. He said that these temporary monopolies were necessary to provide the incentive necessary for firms to develop new products and processes.
  
   Schumpeter and the Gold Standard
  
  Joseph Schumpeter recognized the implication of a gold monetary standard compared to a fiat monetary standard. In History of Economic Analysis he stated the following:
  
   An ‘automatic’ gold currency is part and parcel of a laissez-faire and free-trade economy. It links every nation’s money rates and price levels with the money-rates and price levels of all the other nations that are ‘on gold.’ It is extremely sensitive to government expenditure and even to attitudes or policies that do not involve expenditure directly, for example, to foreign policy, to certain policies of taxation, and, in general, to precisely all those policies that violate the principles of [classical] liberalism. This is the reason why gold is so unpopular now and also why it was so popular in a bourgeois era. It imposes restrictions upon governments or bureaucracies that are much more powerful than is parliamentary criticism. It is both the badge and the guarantee of bourgeois freedom—of freedom not simply of the bourgeois interest, but of freedom in the bourgeois sense. From this standpoint a man may quite rationally fight for it, even if fully convinced of the validity of all that has ever been urged against it on economic grounds. From the standpoint of etatisme and planning, a man may not less rationally condemn it, even if fully convinced of the validity of all that has ever been urged for it on economic grounds.
   —Schumpeter, History of Economic Analysi
  
  
   His legacy
  
  For some time after his death, Schumpeter's views were most influential among various heterodox economists, especially European, who were interested in industrial organization, evolutionary theory, and economic development, and who tended to be on the other end of the political spectrum from Schumpeter and were also often influenced by Keynes, Karl Marx, and Thorstein Veblen. Robert Heilbroner was one of Schumpeter's most renowned pupils, who wrote extensively about him in The Worldly Philosophers. In the journal Monthly Review John Bellamy Foster wrote of that journal's founder Paul Sweezy, one of the leading Marxist economists in the United States and a graduate assistant of Schumpeter's at Harvard, that Schumpeter "played a formative role in his development as a thinker". Other outstanding students of Schumpeter's include the economists Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen and Hyman Minsky and former chairman of the Federal Reserve, Alan Greenspan. Robert Solow, Nobel Prize in Economics, was his student at Harvard, and he expanded on Schumpeter's theory.
  
  Today, Schumpeter has a following outside of standard textbook economics, in areas such as in economic policy, management studies, industrial policy, and the study of innovation. Schumpeter was probably the first scholar to develop theories about entrepreneurship. For instance, the European Union's innovation program, and its main development plan, the Lisbon Strategy, are influenced by Schumpeter. The International Joseph A. Schumpeter Society awards the Schumpeter Prize.
  
  On 17 September 2009, The Economist inaugurated a column on business and management named "Schumpeter." The publication has a history of naming columns after significant figures or symbols in the covered field, including naming its British affairs column after former editor Walter Bagehot and its European affairs column after Charlemagne. The initial Schumpeter column praised him as a "champion of innovation and entrepreneurship" whose writing showed an understanding of the benefits and dangers of business that proved far ahead of its time.
  
   Major work
  
   * "Über die mathematische Methode der theoretischen Ökonomie", 1906, ZfVSV.
   * "Das Rentenprinzip in der Verteilungslehre", 1907, Schmollers Jahrbuch
   * Wesen und Hauptinhalt der theoretischen Nationalökonomie (transl. The Nature and Essence of Theoretical Economics), 1908.
   * "Methodological Individualism", 1908,
   * "On the Concept of Social Value", 1909, QJE
   * Wie studiert man Sozialwissenschaft, 1910 (transl. by J.Z. Muller, "How to Study Social Science", Society, 2003)
   * "Marie Esprit Leon Walras", 1910, ZfVSV.
   * "Über das Wesen der Wirtschaftskrisen", 1910, ZfVSV
   * Theorie der wirtschaftlichen Entwicklung (transl. 1934, The Theory of Economic Development: An inquiry into profits, capital, credit, interest and the business cycle) 1911.
   * Economic Doctrine and Method: An historical sketch, 1914.
   * "Das wissenschaftliche Lebenswerk Eugen von Böhm-Bawerks", 1914, ZfVSV.
   * Vergangenkeit und Zukunft der Sozialwissenschaft, 1915.
   * The Crisis of the Tax State, 1918.
   * "The Sociology of Imperialisms", 1919, Archiv für Sozialwissenschaft und Sozialpolitik
   * "Max Weber's Work", 1920, Der österreichische Volkswirt
   * "Carl Menger", 1921, ZfVS.
   * "The Explanation of the Business Cycle", 1927, Economica
   * "Social Classes in an Ethnically Homogeneous Environment", 1927, Archiv für Sozialwissenschaft und Sozialpolitik.
   * "The Instability of Capitalism", 1928, EJ
   * Das deutsche Finanzproblem, 1928.
   * "Mitchell's Business Cycles", 1930, QJE
   * "The Present World Depression: A tentative diagnosis", 1931, AER.
   * "The Common Sense of Econometrics", 1933, Econometrica
   * "Depressions: Can we learn from past experience?", 1934, in Economics of the Recovery Program
   * "The Nature and Necessity of a Price System", 1934, Economic Reconstruction.
   * "Review of Robinson's Economics of Imperfect Competition", 1934, JPE
   * "The Analysis of Economic Change", 1935, REStat.
   * "Professor Taussig on Wages and Capital", 1936, Explorations in Economics.
   * "Review of Keynes's General Theory", 1936, JASA
   * Business Cycles: A theoretical, historical and statistical analysis of the Capitalist process, 1939.
   * "The Influence of Protective Tariffs on the Industrial Development of the United States", 1940, Proceedings of AAPS
   * "Alfred Marshall's Principles: A semi-centennial appraisal", 1941, AER.
   * "Frank William Taussig", 1941, QJE.
   * Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy, 1942.
   * "Capitalism in the Postwar World", 1943, Postwar Economic Problems.
   * "John Maynard Keynes", 1946, AER.
   * "The Future of Private Enterprise in the Face of Modern Socialistic Tendencies", 1946, Comment sauvegarder l'entreprise privée
   * Rudimentary Mathematics for Economists and Statisticians, with W.L.Crum, 1946.
   * "Capitalism", 1946, Encyclopædia Britannica.
   * "The Decade of the Twenties", 1946, AER
   * "The Creative Response in Economic History", 1947, JEH
   * "Theoretical Problems of Economic Growth", 1947, JEH
   * "Irving Fisher's Econometrics", 1948, Econometrica.
   * "There is Still Time to Stop Inflation", 1948, Nation's Business.
   * "Science and Ideology", 1949, AER.
   * "Vilfredo Pareto", 1949, QJE.
   * "Economic Theory and Entrepreneurial History", 1949, Change and the Entrepreneur
   * "The Communist Manifesto in Sociology and Economics", 1949, JPE
   * "English Economists and the State-Managed Economy", 1949, JPE
   * "The Historical Approach to the Analysis of Business Cycles", 1949, NBER Conference on Business Cycle Research.
   * "Wesley Clair Mitchell", 1950, QJE.
   * "March into Socialism", 1950, AER.
   * Ten Great Economists: From Marx to Keynes, 1951.
   * Imperialism and Social Classes, 1951 (reprints of 1919, 1927)
   * Essays on Economic Topics, 1951.
   * "Review of the Troops", 1951, QJE.
   * History of Economic Analysis, (published posthumously, ed. Elisabeth Boody Schumpeter), 1954.
   * "American Institutions and Economic Progress", 1983, Zeitschrift fur die gesamte Staatswissenschaft
   * "The Meaning of Rationality in the Social Sciences", 1984, Zeitschrift fur die gesamte Staatswissenschaft
   * "Money and Currency", 1991, Social Research.
   * Economics and Sociology of Capitalism, 1991.
    

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