After twenty years running Britain’s coal board, he wrote the case against industrial bigness.
Ernst Friedrich Schumacher was born in Bonn, Germany, in 1911. He studied economics at Berlin, Oxford, and Columbia. After fleeing Germany in the 1930s, he settled in England with help from John Maynard Keynes, who helped arrange a teaching position at Oxford.1
In 1950, Schumacher became chief economist and head of planning at the National Coal Board of Great Britain, a position he held for twenty years. The role gave him an intimate view of how large-scale industrial systems operated and where they failed.2
In 1973, he published Small Is Beautiful: Economics as if People Mattered, a collection of essays that challenged the assumption that bigger operations were always more efficient. The book appeared during the oil crisis and found an audience anxious about industrial scale.3
Schumacher argued that modern economics treated nature as expendable income rather than irreplaceable capital. He proposed what he called "intermediate technology," tools and methods scaled to human communities rather than to multinational corporations. A chapter titled "Buddhist Economics" suggested that work should serve three purposes: giving people a chance to use and develop their faculties, enabling cooperation, and producing goods needed for existence.4
Time magazine called the book an "eco-bible." The Times Literary Supplement later named it one of the hundred most influential books published since World War II.5
Schumacher founded the Intermediate Technology Development Group, which designed tools and small-scale machines for developing countries. He died in 1977 while on a lecture tour in Switzerland.6 His subtitle, "Economics as if People Mattered," remains one of the most cited phrases in the history of economic criticism, a quiet accusation that mainstream economics had forgotten what it was supposed to be measuring.