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  1. Reviewed Work: Teoría monetaria y política fiscal by Alvin H. Hansen Review by: Federico Julio Herschel El Trimestre Económico , Vol. 22, No. 86(2) (Abril-Junio de 1955), pp. 253-256 (4 pages)

  2. 12. Dez. 2013 · Secular Stagnation: Back to Alvin Hansen. In December 1938, one of the most eminent economists of the time, Alvin E. Hansen, delivered the Presidential Address, titled "Economic Progress and Declining Population Growth," at the annual meetings of the American Economic Association. Looking at the economy of the late 1930s, Hansen wrote:"This is ...

  3. Alvin Harvey Hansen (1887-1975), an economist, was the Littauer Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University. His work focused on Keynesian economics in the United States. Writings, publications, and related records in this collection document Alvin Harvey Hansen's academic contributions to economics from 1918 to 1957.

  4. Found. Redirecting to /core/journals/journal-of-the-history-of-economic-thought/article/abs/from-business-cycle-theory-to-the-theory-of-employment-alvin-hansen-and ...

  5. Alvin Harvey Hansen (1887-1975) was a business cycle theorist who, in the late 1930s, became one of the leading exponents of Keynesian thinking, seeing the Keynes’s multiplier as providing a missing link in his earlier, dynamic theory of the cycle. After moving from Minnesota to Harvard in 1937, together with John Williams, he ran the Fiscal Policy Seminar, which was an important forum in ...

  6. 26. Nov. 2016 · Alvin Hansen grew up in Viborg, South Dakota, a small rural community with a one-room school house and traditional values. Preferring academic pursuits to farm work, he proceeded to Sioux Falls for his high school education and then to Yankton College for his BA degree. Several years of high school teaching followed, with rapid advancement to principal and superintendent. The financial basis ...

  7. Born on a farm three miles south of Viborg on 23 August 1887, two years before South Dakota was admitted into the Union, Alvin H. Hansen was the youngest of four children of Danish immigrants.7 The surrounding area was almost entirely Danish in makeup, and the Hansen family spoke the language at home.