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  1. Overview. Allyn Abbott Young (1876-1929), economist and teacher, was a professor of economics at Harvard University from 1920 to 1927. Young applied mathematical tools for a more precise formation of economic theory and supported a closer interaction between economic study and general social analysis. The collection chiefly includes Young’s ...

  2. 1. Nov. 1996 · Money and Growth: Selected Papers of Allyn Abbott Young. The Making of Index Numbers in the Early 1920s: A Closer Look at the Fisher-Mitchell Debate. Allyn A. Young: a curious case of professional neglect . Related Topics. young. economic ...

  3. Allyn Young (1876-1929) was a deep thinker and achieved fame during his lifetime. His fame owes more to his style and influence as a teacher than his published work. His greatest fame as an author rests on a single economic paper on increasing returns and economic progress but he contributed much more as a mentor to his graduate students such as Frank Knight, Edward Chamberlin, and Lauchlin ...

  4. 1. Jan. 1999 · Allyn Abbott Young was born into a middle-class family in Kenton, Ohio on September 19, 1876 and died aged 52 in London on March 7, 1929, his life cut short by pneumonia during an influenza epidemic.

  5. Allyn Abbott Young was born at Ken ton, Ohio, September 19, 1876. He was of New England stock, his forbears English on both. sides. The family was intellectual; the father, a brother, and a sister, were teachers of high quality. His undergraduate work was done at Hiram College, Ohio, where he graduated in 1894.

  6. 1. Dez. 2006 · This paper investigates the influence of Allyn Abbott Young's theoretical work on the groundbreaking contributions of early development theorists, Paul Rosenstein-Rodan and Ragnar Nurkse.

  7. 1. Jan. 2017 · Abstract. Allyn Young’s career presents a puzzle. He is best known to modem readers, if at all, as the author of one muchreprinted article on ‘Increasing Returns and Economic Progress’ (1928). With such a narrow base his present fame can of course hardly compare with that of some other leading American economists of his day, such as ...