Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Anna Jacobson Schwartz (pronounced / ʃ w ɔːr t s / SHWORTS; November 11, 1915 – June 21, 2012) was an American economist who worked at the National Bureau of Economic Research in New York City and a writer for The New York Times.

  2. Nov 26, 2021 · While Anna Jacobson Schwartz may have deserved credit for the Federal Reserve not repeating the detrimental errors it made during the Great Depression, she was a firm opponent of how Bernanke handled the Great Recession.

  3. Nov 12, 2021 · She openly criticized bailouts and published an op-ed in the New York Times condemning Ben Bernanke and the Federal Reserve. Throughout her career, Anna Schwartz’s work was distinguished by meticulous attention to detail and unsurpassed knowledge of data and sources of information on monetary and financial matters.

  4. Jul 25, 2009 · Op-Ed Contributor. Man Without a Plan. By Anna Jacobson Schwartz. July 25, 2009. Share full article. See how this article appeared when it was originally published on NYTimes.com. AS...

    • Anna Jacobson Schwartz
  5. In 1981, the US Secretary of the Treasury selected Anna Schwartz to join the congressionally mandated “Gold Commission” to assess the role of gold in domestic and international monetary systems (United States, Department of the Treasury, 1981, July 6).

  6. Mar 5, 2014 · Anna Jacobson Schwartz is probably best-known today as co-author with Milton Friedman of the 1963 classic, A Monetary History of the United States. But her extraordinary career covered so much more.

  7. People also ask

  8. Monetarist economic historian. Anna J. Schwartz is perhaps most famous for her monumental 1963 study A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960 with Milton Friedman. Like Friedman, Schwartz was educated at Columbia during its Institutionalist heydey under Wesley C. Mitchell.