Career
In 1919, Slichter taught at
Princeton University. A regular lecturer and contributor to magazines such as
Harper's, Slichter was arguably the best-known economist in America at the peak of his career. Slichter's textbook,
Modern Economic Society, was a standard introductory economics textbook in America before 1950. Slichter was president of the
American Economic Association in 1941. He was elected to the
American Philosophical Society in 1946. Though critical of substantial portions of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt's economic policy, Slichter served as an informal economic adviser to
Harry Truman. ==Views==
Views
Slichter was skeptical of the New Deal as a means to provide full employment, arguing that a government guarantee of full employment created
perverse incentives for employees. As
World War II drew to a close, most economists predicted that with an end to government spending on the war, the economy would collapse again. Slichter correctly predicted that with soldiers coming home seeking a normal life and material pleasures, the economy would grow strongly after the end of the war and that inflation would be a greater cause for concern than depression. ==Personal life==
Works
Books: His books include: • Turnover of factory labor (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1919) • Modern economic society, a survey of the existing economic order with particular reference to the United States (Ann Arbor, MI: Edwards brothers, 1926) • Modern economic society (New York: IBAA, 1941) • The outlook for private enterprise in America (New York: H. Holt, 1931) • Union Policies and Industrial Management (Washington, DC : Brookings Institution, 1941) • Union Policies and Industrial Management (New York: Greenwood Press, 1968) • Union Policies and Industrial Management (New York: Arno, 1969) • Present savings and postwar markets (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1943) • American economic and business foundation: Summary view of American economic policies with Robert D. Calkins, J. Franklin Ebersole (New Wilmington, PA: Economic and Business Foundation, 1943) • New pattern of labor relations with Sam A. Lewisohn, Robert J. Watt (New York: American Management Association, 1944) • Challenge of Industrial Relations (1946) • Basic Criteria Used in Wage Determination (1947) • Trade Unions in a Free Society (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1947, 1948) • American Economy: Its Problems and Prospects (1948) • American Economy: Its Problems and Prospects (Westport, CN: Greenwood Press, 1979) • ''What's Ahead for American Business'' (Boston: Little, Brown, 1951) • Productivity: Still Going Up (New York: New York Public Library, 1952) • Impact of Collective Bargaining on Management with James J. Healy, E. Robert Livernash (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution, 1960) • Potentials of the American economy; selected essays edited by John T. Dunlop (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1961) • Economic Growth in the United States: Its History, Problems, and Prospects edited by John T. Dunlop (Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press, 1961) • Economic Growth in the United States: Its History, Problems, and Prospects edited by John T. Dunlop (Westport, CN: Greenwood Press, 1981) • Union Policies and Industrial Management (1968) Articles: Slichter's scholarly articles include: • "The Worker in Modern Economic Society" (review), Journal of Political Economy (1926) • "The Current Labor Policies of American Industries," Quarterly Journal of Economics (1929) • "Should the Budget be Balanced?" The New Republic (1932) {{cite magazine • "New Wisdom for a New Age: Review of Keynes's Essays in Persuasion," The New Republic (1932) • "The Changing Character of American Industrial Relations," American Economic Review (1939) • "What do the Strikes Teach Us?" The Atlantic Monthly (1946) {{cite journal • "Wage-Price Flexibility and Employment" American Economic Review (1946) ==References==