RIAMCO

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Albert Ford Hinrichs letters from the USSR (Ms. 82.3)

Brown University Library

Box A
Brown University
Providence, RI 02912
Tel: 401-863-2146
Fax: 401-863-2093


Biographical note

Albert Ford Hinrichs, born in 1899, obtained three degrees in economics at Columbia University between 1921 and 1923. Following several years at the New York State Bureau of Housing and Regional Planning, in 1926 he became Associate Professor of Economics and Director of the Bureau of Business Research at Brown University, a position which he held until 1934.

While a member of the Brown University faculty, he made two trips to the Soviet Union. His first trip, in July and August 1930, was as a member of a group led by Professor Seager of Columbia University (under whom Dr. Hinrichs had studied), the first group of American economists to visit that country since 1917. A tour of the countryside had been arranged in advance with Intourist. His second trip, from August to November 1932, had been intended as a full year's sabbatical stay. His plan, for which he obtained permission from the Soviet government before leaving the United States, was to spend four months in Moscow, visit his wife and children in Switzerland at Christmas, and then tour the Russian countryside. But there was famine and popular unrest that year, and the projected tour was not permitted; he even found it difficult to make appointments with officials in Moscow. After rejoining his family, therefore, he did not return to Russia but spent six months in 1933 studying national planning in Italy and other topics.

Following his return to the United States, Dr. Hinrichs was able to apply his research to a book on social and economic planning, which he wrote in collaboration with Lewis Lorin under the auspices of the National Planning Commission in the Department of the Interior. In 1934 he joined the Bureau of Labor Statistics in the Department of Labor, where he remained until 1946. Subsequently he held several official, academic, and advisory positions until 1967. He died in 1978.

Chronology

Date Event
1899 Born in Brooklyn, New York
1916-1920 Attended Cornell University
1921 B.A. in Economics, Columbia University
1922 M.A. in Economics, Columbia University. Married Edith F. Pendreigh
1923 Ph.D. in Economics, Columbia University
1924-1926 Director of Research, New York State Bureau of Housing and Regional Planning
1926-1934 Associate Professor of Economics and Director of the Bureau of Business Research, Brown University
1930 First trip to USSR
1932 Second trip to USSR
1934-1940 Chief Economist, Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor
1940 Assistant Commissioner, Bureau of Labor Statistics
1940-1946 Acting Commissioner, Bureau of Labor Statistics
1946-1948 Economist, Kiplinger Washington Agency
1948-1953 Assistant Chief of the Division of Finance and Fiscal Policy, U.S. Economic Cooperation Administration
1955-1957 with Institute of Public and Business Administration, University of Karachi
1957-1964 Professor of Business Administration and Director of Graduate Studies in Business, Syracuse University
1959-1961 Principal Statistical Advisor to the Government of Pakistan
1964-1978 Professor Emeritus, Syracuse University
1965-1967 Chief Statistical Advisor to the Government of the Republic of China
1978 Died in Washington, D.C.