Jan Tinbergen was the first Nobel Prize winner in Economics and one of
the most influential economists of the 20th century. This book argues
that his crucial contribution is the theory of economic policy and the
legitimation of economic expertise in service of the state. It traces
his youthful socialist ideals which found political direction in the
Plan-socialist movement of the 1930s for which he developed new economic
models to combat the Great Depression. After World War II he was able to
synthesize that work into a theory of economic policy which not only
provided a lasting framework for economic policy around the world, but
also secured a permanent place for economic experts close to government.
The book then turns to an examination of his attempt to repeat this
achievement in the development projects in the Global South and at the
international level for the United Nations.