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Dennis Holme Robertson

デニス・ホルム・ロバートソン

Denisu Horumu Robātoson

Aliases: Dennis Robertson / Sir Dennis Holme Robertson

Profile

Gender
Male
Born
1890-05-23 (Lowestoft, Suffolk, England)
Died
1963-04-21 (Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England) age 72
Nationality
United Kingdom
Languages
English
Religion
Church of England
Residence History
Lowestoft, Suffolk → Cambridge

Career

Occupations
Economist, University Professor
Active Years
1912-1963
Affiliations
University of Cambridge, University of London
Memberships
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Philosophical Society
Influenced By
Knut Wicksell
Influenced
John Maynard Keynes

Education

Eton College
Classics
Country: United Kingdom
Educated as a scholar
Trinity College, Cambridge
Classics and Economics
Year of Graduation: 1912
Country: United Kingdom
Read Classics and Economics

Awards

Knight Bachelor
Organization: British Monarch
Result: 受爵

Awards & Nominations

Works

Major Works

A Study of Industrial Fluctuations

1915 Economics

A study on industrial fluctuations

Industrial FluctuationsBusiness Cycles

Money

1922 Economics

Book on money in economics

MoneyBanking Policy

Banking Policy and the Price Level

1926 Economics

Discusses banking policy and price levels

Banking PolicyPrice Level

Bibliography

  • A Study of Industrial Fluctuations
  • Economic Incentive
  • Money
  • The Control of Industry
  • Those Empty Boxes
  • Banking Policy and the Price Level
  • Economic Fragments
  • How Do We Want Gold to Behave?
  • Saving and Hoarding
  • Some Notes on Mr Keynes's General Theory of Employment
  • Alternative Theories of the Rate of Interest
  • Essays in Monetary Theory
  • Utility and All That
  • Britain in the World Economy
  • Economic Commentaries
  • Lectures on Economic Principles
  • Growth, Wages, Money
  • Essays in Money and Interest

Style & Themes

Literary Style
AnalyticalTheoretical
Recurring Motifs
Business CyclesMonetary Policy

Health

  • Heart attack
    1963年
    Cause of death

Legacy

Influential economist who worked with Keynes and first used the term 'liquidity trap'.