Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Karl Gustav Cassel (* 20. Oktober 1866 in Stockholm; † 15. Januar 1945 in Jönköping) war ein schwedischer Professor für Volkswirtschaftslehre. Er studierte zuerst Mathematik in Uppsala und dann Ökonomie in Deutschland. Er lehrte Ökonomie in Stockholm von 1903 bis 1936.

  2. Karl Gustav Cassel (20 October 1866 – 14 January 1945) was a Swedish economist and professor of economics at Stockholm University. Cassel was among the most prominent economists in the world in the interwar period. Cassel was influential in Swedish debates about central planning in the early 20th century.

  3. Gustav Cassel (born October 20, 1866, Stockholm, Sweden—died January 14, 1945, Djursholm?) was a Swedish economist who gained international prominence through his work on world monetary problems at the Brussels Conference in 1920 and on the League of Nations Finance Committee in 1921.

  4. 16. Nov. 2018 · From the standpoint of the history of economic thought, Gustav Cassel was the greatest proponent and expositor of purchasing power parity (PPP). No predecessor of Cassel, no contemporary, no later author implanted the PPP theory so broadly and firmly in the economics profession.

    • lofficer@uic.edu
  5. Karl Gustav Cassel, 1866-1945. Swedish Neoclassical economist. Originally from a wealthy family of Stockholm, Gustav Cassel started off his studies in engineering, but soon shifted over to pure mathematics. Cassel submitted an ambitious dissertation on automorphic functions to earn his doctorate from the University of Uppsala in 1894.

  6. G ustav Cassel, a Swedish economist, developed the theory of exchange rates known as purchasing power parity in a series of post-World War I memoranda for the League of Nations. The basic concept can be made clear with an example. If US$4 buys one bushel of wheat in the United States, and if 120 Japanese yen exchange for US$1, then the price of ...

  7. Gustav Cassel rediscovered the PPP theory after the theory’s long-dormant period. That is the proximate reason why it is Cassel, writing during World War I, whose name is almost invariably the first connected to the theory. Indeed, the PPP theory is sometimes called, simply, “Cassel’s theory.” 2.2 The Impact of Cassel