Gardiner Means
Gardiner Coit Means (June 8, 1896[2] – February 15, 1988)[3] was an American economist who worked at Harvard University, where he met lawyer-diplomat Adolf A. Berle. Together they wrote the seminal work of corporate governance, The Modern Corporation and Private Property. During the New Deal, Means served as an economic adviser to Franklin D. Roosevelt and Henry A. Wallace. Academic workMeans followed the institutionalist tradition of economists. In 1934 he coined the term "administered prices" to refer to prices set by firms themselves, as contrasted with market prices, set for commodities like corn and oil in impersonal markets. In The Corporate Revolution in America (1962) he wrote:
Means argued that where an economy is fueled by big firms it is the interests of management, not the public, that govern society. Bibliography
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