Alfred Müller-Armack

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alfred Müller-Armack (Essen, 28 June 1901Köln, 16 March 1978) was a German economist and politician.

He was professor of economics at University of Münster and University of Cologne. Müller-Armack coined the term "social market economy" in 1946.

Müller-Armack was a central figure of the Cologne school. He always pointed out that the economy had to serve humanity. A regulatory environment should provide the basis for a form of competition that was to the best for all people.

After 1952, he worked in the economic ministry under Ludwig Erhard (CDU) as section chief of the newly founded planning section (Grundsatzabteilung).


This article about an economist is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Languages