John E. King. Nicholas Kaldor (Book Review) John E. King. Nicholas Kaldor (Book Review)

John E. King. Nicholas Kaldor (Book Review‪)‬

History of Economics Review 2010, Wntr, 51

    • $5.99
    • $5.99

Publisher Description

John E. King. Nicholas Kaldor. Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan. 2009. Pp. viii + 250. ISBN 0-230-21725-7. US$90. As John King has rightly remarked in this journal (King 2007, p. 54), the work of Nicholas Kaldor (1908-1986), which ranged over almost the whole field of economics, was 'original, provocative and invariably interesting'. His life was interesting too. Born in Budapest, Hungary, he arrived in England in 1927, after eighteen months at the University of Berlin, to study at the London School of Economics (LSE) and thus became a student both of Allyn Young, the newly appointed professor of political economy, and of Lionel Robbins, who was appointed to a chair in economics after Young's death. Graduating with a first-class BSc(Econ) degree in 1930, he became a research student with Robbins as his supervisor and, in 1932, an assistant lecturer in economics. A lively and argumentative contributor to the graduate student and faculty seminar presided over by Robbins, Kaldor was soon publishing in the journals on topics such as the nature of equilibrium and imperfect competition. He had also, at Robbins's instigation, translated some of Hayek's work into English (Hayek 1931, 1933). He was awarded a Rockefeller Travelling Fellowship to the USA in 1935-6, when his four-year appointment as assistant lecturer was extended for an extra year, and he was promoted to lecturer in 1938 (on Robbins's recommendation). Having read Keynes's General Theory (1936) while he was in the States, he came back a Keynesian. He had earlier been introduced to the writings of the Swedish economist Gunnar Myrdal by his colleague and friend, John Hicks. He began to publish on more macroeconomic topics--wages and unemployment as well as capital and interest. He moved from LSE to Cambridge at the outbreak of war and taught there for the duration, but with leaves of absence to work (part-time) for the National Institute of Economic and Social Research 1943-5, to serve as chief of the economic planning staff of the US Strategic Bombing Survey April-August 1945 and as adviser to the Hungarian government in 1946. He continued to live in Cambridge after the war, though still on the LSE staff until 1947, when Myrdal invited him to join the staff of the UN Economic Commission for Europe in Geneva. At that point the LSE governors declined to allow him another leave. Two years later he was offered a position in Cambridge as a lecturer in economics and a fellow of King's College. There he participated in the development of the theory of economic growth and distribution and the related debates that led to the creation of a 'post-Keynesian' school of economists. But, like Myrdal, he continued to be heavily involved in economic policy as a consultant, adviser or research director, becoming famous (or notorious) for his tax advice to the British and eight other governments. In Britain he was a special adviser to three Labour Chancellors of the Exchequer, James Callaghan in 1964-7, Roy Jenkins 1967-8 and Denis Healey 1974-6. While many of his innovations, such as the Selective Employment Tax introduced in 1966, were short-lived, his classic An Expenditure Tax (1955) remains influential. A British subject since 1934, he was made a life peer in 1974.

GENRE
Business & Personal Finance
RELEASED
2010
January 1
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
11
Pages
PUBLISHER
History of Economic Thought Society of Australia
SELLER
The Gale Group, Inc., a Delaware corporation and an affiliate of Cengage Learning, Inc.
SIZE
239.4
KB

More Books Like This

Cambridge Economics in the Post-Keynesian Era Cambridge Economics in the Post-Keynesian Era
2022
A.C. Pigou and the 'Marshallian' Thought Style A.C. Pigou and the 'Marshallian' Thought Style
2018
Making History by Making Identity and Institutions: The Emergence of Post Keynesian-Heterodox Economics in Britain, 1974-1996. Making History by Making Identity and Institutions: The Emergence of Post Keynesian-Heterodox Economics in Britain, 1974-1996.
2007
The Economic Thought of William Petty The Economic Thought of William Petty
2018
Ethics in Quantitative Finance Ethics in Quantitative Finance
2017
Barry Gordon's Research, Influences and Contacts. Barry Gordon's Research, Influences and Contacts.
2002

More Books by History of Economics Review

On Paul Krugman on Maynard Keynes' General Theory (The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money) (Book Review) On Paul Krugman on Maynard Keynes' General Theory (The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money) (Book Review)
2008
Irving Fisher's the Purchasing Power of Money. Irving Fisher's the Purchasing Power of Money.
2011
Amartya Sen Reading Adam Smith (Essay) Amartya Sen Reading Adam Smith (Essay)
2010
Hilferding's Finance Capital in the Development of Marxist Thought (Rudolf Hilferding) (Critical Essay) Hilferding's Finance Capital in the Development of Marxist Thought (Rudolf Hilferding) (Critical Essay)
2010
G.C. Harcourt and Prue Kerr. Joan Robinson (Book Review) G.C. Harcourt and Prue Kerr. Joan Robinson (Book Review)
2010
Not for Love Nor Money: Milton Friedman's Counter-Revolution (Keynes, Chicago and Friedman) (Book Review) Not for Love Nor Money: Milton Friedman's Counter-Revolution (Keynes, Chicago and Friedman) (Book Review)
2006