Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Alvin Harvey Hansen (1887-1975), an economist, was the Littauer Professor of Political Economy at Harvard University from 1937 to 1957. Hansen introduced Keynesian economics to the United States in the 1930s and played a significant role in creating the Social Security System and the Council of Economic Advisors. The Papers of Alvin Harvey ...

  2. These curves have since become famously known as the IS-LM model and were popularized by a now-converted Alvin Hansen (1949, 1953). The IS-LM model has remained one of the most formidable pieces of pedagogic machinery and, as far as back-of-the-envelope diagrammatic reasoning is concerned, one of the most efficient ever devised in economics.

  3. ALVINH.HANSEN'SCONTRIBUTIONS TOBUSINESSCYCLEANALYSIS E.CaryBrown No.515 March1989 massachusetts instituteof technology 50memorialdrive Cambridge,mass.02139. ALVINH.HANSEN'SCONTRIBUTIONS TOBUSINESSCYCLEANALYSIS E.GaryBrown No.515 March1989. AlvinH.Hansen' ...

  4. This book examines the academic life of Alvin Hansen and his contribution to modern economics. Through tracing the development of his early work and pre-Keynesian ideas, the influence of Keynes and the 1937-8 recession on the direction of his work is explored, particularly in relation to his theoretical backing of the New Deal and subsequent American policy. The subsequent chapters focus on ...

  5. 15. Nov. 2023 · <p>This book examines the academic life of Alvin Hansen and his contribution to modern economics. Through tracing the development of his early work and pre-Keynesian ideas, the influence of Keynes and the 1937-8 recession on the direction of his work is explored, particularly in relation to his theoretical backing of the New Deal and subsequent American policy. The subsequent chapters ...

  6. 1. Juni 2004 · Alvin Hansen on Economic Progress and Declining Population Growth The address is reproduced below from the March 1939 issue of the American Economic Review. (The opening paragraphs of the address, and two paragraphs, immediately preceding the closing paragraph, in which Hansen discusses changes in US national income in the 1930s, have been omitted.)

  7. Hansen is quite definite that a recovery based upon compensatory expen-ditures will not engender a new era of progress. "Such a recovery can proceed no farther than it is pushed. It has no momentum of its own. It has no inner power to complete its own development." In Fiscal Policy and Business Cycles he qualifies this position: "A way must be ...