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Losing equilibrium: On the existence of Abraham Wald’s fixed-point proof of 1935
Abstract
© 2016 by Duke University Press.In fall 1935, Abraham Wald presented a fixed-point
proof of a general equilibrium model to Karl Menger's Mathematical Colloquium in Vienna.
Due to limited space, the paper could not be printed in the eighth proceedings of
the colloquium (the Ergebnisse) published in spring 1937 but was scheduled for the
ninth issue of the series. After the annexation of Austria to Nazi Germany in March
1938, however, Menger's colloquium ended and the proof never appeared in print. Nor
did Wald, after he fled to the United States and launched a career in statistics,
attempt to circulate his proof. After his sudden death in 1950, only Wald's preliminary
proof of 1934 was translated into English for Econometrica. When thus Kenneth J. Arrow,
Gérard Debreu, and Lionel McKenzie in 1954 referred in their own fixed-point proofs
only to Wald's preliminary published version, his 1935 fixed-point proof was forgotten.
This did not change when economists and historians of economics, the authors included,
reconstructed Wald's contribution. New evidence, however, proves its existence. This
article tells the story of Wald's lost equilibrium proof.
Type
Journal articlePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13161Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1215/00182702-3687283Publication Info
Duppe, T; & Weintraub, ER (2016). Losing equilibrium: On the existence of Abraham Wald’s fixed-point proof of 1935.
History of Political Economy, 48(4). pp. 635-655. 10.1215/00182702-3687283. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/13161.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Show full item recordScholars@Duke
E. Roy Weintraub
Professor Emeritus of Economics
Roy Weintraub was trained as a mathematician though his professional career has been
as an economist. Beginning in the early 1980s, his research and teaching activities
focused upon the history of the interconnection between mathematics and economics
in the twentieth century. This work, in the history of economics, has helped shape
the understanding of economists and historians: his General Equilibrium Theory (1985), Stabilizing
Dynamics (1991),

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