Joseph Schumpeter

E38068

Joseph Schumpeter was an influential Austrian-American economist best known for his theories of innovation, entrepreneurship, and “creative destruction” in capitalist economies.

Aliases (1)

Statements (62)
Predicate Object
instanceOf economist
human
politician
university teacher
writer
causeOfDeath cerebral hemorrhage
countryOfCitizenship Austria
Austria-Hungary
United States of America
dateOfBirth 1883-02-08
dateOfDeath 1950-01-08
doctoralAdvisor Eugen Böhm von Bawerk
educatedAt London School of Economics
University of Berlin NERFINISHED
University of Vienna
employer Harvard University
University of Bonn NERFINISHED
University of Czernowitz
University of Graz
familyName Schumpeter
fieldOfWork economic history
economics
history of economic thought
political economy
givenName Joseph
influenced Hyman Minsky
Israel Kirzner
Paul Samuelson
Robert Solow
evolutionary economics
innovation economics
influencedBy Karl Marx
Leon Walras
Max Weber
languageOfWorkOrName English
German
mannerOfDeath natural causes
movement Austrian School of economics
neoclassical economics
nativeLanguage German
notableIdea creative destruction
entrepreneur as innovator
innovation theory of business cycles
tax state theory
notableWork Business Cycles
Capitalism, Socialism and Democracy
History of Economic Analysis
The Theory of Economic Development
placeOfBirth Austria-Hungary
Moravia
Třešť
placeOfDeath Connecticut
Taconic
United States of America
positionHeld Austrian Minister of Finance
president of Biedermann Bank
professor of economics at Harvard University
religion Roman Catholicism
sexOrGender male
spouse Annie Reisinger
Elizabeth Boody Schumpeter
Gladys Ricarde Seaver


Please wait…