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As
Administrator-General of Finances of Iran, he brought positive results in balancing the Iranian budget, further strengthening the American case in Iranian government circles. Iranian government officials were grateful to Millspaugh by whom appreciable reduction was effected in the monthly deficit
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In 1942 Millspaugh headed another financial mission, this time clearly connected with the U. S. State
Department. His mission was hampered again by internal political rivalries in Iran, the entrenched vested interests of the Iranian political elite (economic, military, political, and tribal), and
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Discussing Iran’s shattered economy, Millspaugh’s book sympathetically portrayed Iran and
Iranians, but heaped criticism on the Iranian bureaucracy. "The American task in Persia" was highly influential in shaping American political opinion towards Iran. Commentaries on Iran appearing in American
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Millspaugh managed to implement a number of reforms, including a new taxation law that hit the poor hard but financed Reza Shah’s Trans-Iranian
Railway project, which got underway in 1927. The mission’s accomplishments were repeatedly hampered by internal political rivalries in
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reached the
Persian capital in November, 1922. He found the Persian treasury empty and the fiscal administration in chaos, but with the help of the Persian authorities and the military, he straightened matters out. A budget was established, taxes were collected, and
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with seesawing political orientations (with 11 prime ministers between 1941 and 1946). The financial mission under
Millspaugh’s supervision again became a source of irritation between Tehran and Washington and had to be terminated in 1945.
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as a liberator from
British and Russian dominance, as well as the country which would make Iran prosperous and rich. Up until the Cold War, Millspaugh tried, unsuccessfully, to influence the U.S. State Department's policies toward Iran.
174:. Replete with “clinical” metaphors, and speaking from experience from his days working for the Shah's government, Millspaugh this time was more pessimistic and critical of Iranians, portraying them as incapable of self-government:
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for two years and working in the drafting office of the United States State
Department for three more, he became acting foreign trade adviser in 1921-22. When Persia requested that an American financial adviser be sent to
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terminated the authority on grounds of
Millspaugh’s repeated noncompliance with the Shah’s requests for increased military expenditure.
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Despite being given temporary legislative authority, Millspaugh's reforms were unable to rejuvenate the
Iranian economy.
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300:- ايران در سه قرن گذشته), Volume 2 p 661-664. (Paktāb Publishing - انتشارات پاکتاب, Tehran, Iran, 2003).
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With his help, Iran became independent of foreign loans to maintain its economy. Before
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and a widespread system of patronage and graft among many leading Iranian politicians.
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magazine, frequently relied on Millspaugh’s accounts as a principal source.
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for four years, and again returned in 1942 by the invitation of Iran's 13th
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Toward efficient democracy; the question of governmental organization,
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Democracy, efficiency, stability; an appraisal of American government,
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Peace plans and American choices; the pros and cons of world order,
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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Party organization and machinery in Michigan since 1890,
282:U. S.-Iranian Relations: 1911-1951, M. Bonakdarian
234:Washington, D.C., The Brookings institution, 1942.
222:Washington, D.C., The Brookings Institution, 1936.
210:Washington, D.C., The Brookings Institution, 1942.
204:Washington, D.C., The Brookings Institution, 1937.
198:Washington, D.C., The Brookings Institution, 1946.
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34:, PhD, (1883–1955) was a former adviser at the
216:Boston, Mass., World peace foundation. 1931.
287:The Contemporary Political History of Iran,
320:; Peck, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905).
228:Baltimore, The Johns Hopkins Press, 1917.
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170:, was published by the policy think-tank
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326:(1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.
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292:'Alí Rizā Awsatí (عليرضا اوسطى),
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294:Iran in the Past Three Centuries
240:The Brookings institution, 1935.
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158:frequent cabinet reshuffles in
323:New International Encyclopedia
249:, Brookings Institution, 1949.
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298:Irān dar Se Qarn-e Goz̲ashteh
134:"The American Task in Persia"
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238:Public welfare organization,
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180:(p 243 of his second book)
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32:Arthur Chester Millspaugh
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71:University of Illinois
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377:Albion College alumni
172:Brookings Institution
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397:People of Qajar Iran
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254:See also
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276:Sources
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160:Tehran
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