biography
| name: |
Tolley, Howard Ross
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| sex:
| male
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| lived:
| (1889–1958)
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| biography:
| Agricultural economist, born in Howard Co, Indiana, USA. In 1912 he moved to Washington, DC as a mathematician for the Coast and Geodetic Survey, then started working for the US Department of Agriculture (1915). At the Office of Farm Management he initiated research on economic aspects of farming. When the Bureau of Agricultural Economics (BAE) opened in 1923, he helped develop a research programme to generate data as well as techniques for analyzing farm problems. He left (1930) for the University of California's Giannini Foundation for Agricultural Economics, but returned to Washington at President Franklin Roosevelt's request to assist with New Deal farm programmes. At the Agricultural Adjustment Administration (AAA) he developed a conservation-oriented plan (1933–5). In 1944 he administered the AAA and in 1946 returned to the BAE as its chief. He advocated cash supports, quota systems, and restricted acreage for certain crops, and helped organize the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations (1943) and was one of its chief economists. He left to join the Ford Foundation as director of the Washington office (1951–4). Among his publications are The Farmer, Citizen at War (1943) and articles for the Journal of Farm Economics. |
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