Details

The Gypsy Economist


The Gypsy Economist

The Life and Times of Colin Clark
Palgrave Studies in the History of Economic Thought

von: Alex Millmow

96,29 €

Verlag: Palgrave Macmillan
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 11.03.2021
ISBN/EAN: 9789813369467
Sprache: englisch

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Beschreibungen

This book offers the first intellectual biography of the Anglo Australian economist, Colin Clark. Despite taking the economics world by storm with a mercurial ability for statistical analysis, Clark’s work has been largely overlooked in the 30 years since his death. His career was punctuated by a number of firsts.  He was the first economist to derive the concept of GNP, the first to broach development economics and to foresee the re-emergence of India and China within the global economy. In 1945, he predicted the rise and persistence of inflation when taxation levels exceeded 25 per cent of GNP.  And he was also the first economist to debunk post-war predictions of mass hunger by arguing that rapid population growth engendered economic development. Clark wandered through the fields of applied economics in much the same way as he rambled through the English countryside and the Australian bush. His imaginative wanderings qualify him as the eminent gypsy economist for the 20thcentury.
Chapter 1 Introduction.- PART I: 1905-1937 The Makings of an Applied Economist.- <br>Chapter 2 Brilliant Beginnings.- Chapter 3 Cambridge and Fabianism.- Chapter 4 Becoming the World’s Economic Statistician.- Part II: 1937-1952 Australian Idyll.- Chapter 5 Great Southern Land.- Chapter 6 Forsaking Keynes.- Chapter 7 Three classic contributions.- Chapter 8 Spiritual Awakening.- Chapter 9 Two Revelations.- Chapter 10 Macroeconomics and the Pursuit of Ruralism.- Chapter 11The Tarmac Economist.- PART III: 1953-1969 A Gypsy Scholar at Oxford.- Chapter 12 Research Leadership.- Chapter 13The Man who Smashed Convention.- Chapter 14 A Critical Eye on British Economic Policy.- Chapter 15 The Grand Soothsayer.- Chapter 16 Slaying the Doomsayers.- Chapter 17 Angling for Australia.- Part IV: 1969-1989 Australia Resumed.- Chapter 18 The Monash Years.- Chapter 19 At Heaven’s Gate.- Bibliography.- Index.
<p>Alex Millmow was formerly an associate professor in economics at Federation University Australia where he is now an honorary research fellow. He is also an honorary research fellow at the School of History, Australian National University. He is currently President of the History of Economic Thought Society of Australia. His last book was A History of Australasian Economic Thought IN 2017.</p>
<div>​This book offers the first intellectual biography of the Anglo Australian economist, Colin Clark. Despite taking the economics world by storm with a mercurial ability for statistical analysis, Clark’s work has been largely overlooked in the 30 years since his death. His career was punctuated by a number of firsts.&nbsp; He was the first economist to derive the concept of GNP, the first to broach development economics and to foresee the re-emergence of India and China within the global economy. In 1945, he predicted the rise and persistence of inflation when taxation levels exceeded 25 per cent of GNP.&nbsp; And he was also the first economist to debunk post-war predictions of mass hunger by arguing that rapid population growth engendered economic development. Clark wandered through the fields of applied economics in much the same way as he rambled through the English countryside and the Australian bush. His imaginative wanderings qualify him as the eminent gypsy economist for the20th century.</div><div><br></div><div><br>Alex Millmow was formerly an associate professor in economics at Federation University Australia where he is now an honorary research fellow. He is also an honorary research fellow at the School of History, Australian National University. He is currently President of the History of Economic Thought Society of Australia. His last book was A History of Australasian Economic Thought IN 2017.</div>
Offers the first intellectual biography of the Anglo Australian economist, Colin Clark Argues that Clark was the first economist to derive the concept of GNP States that Clark wandered through the fields of applied economics in much the same way as he rambled through the English countryside and the Australian bush