| Meade, James Edward (1907-) |
|
James Edward Meade
was professor of commerce at the London School of Economics until 1957,
after which he taught at Cambridge University until 1974. Before his career
in academics, he "helped prepare the British government's set of national
income accounts during World War II." Meade, along with
Bertil Ohlin,
won the Nobel Prize in 1977 for their "pathbreaking contribution to the
theory of international trade and international capital movements." During
the 1930's, he was a member of the "Cambridge Circus"...a group of Cambridge
graduate students who met religiously to discuss and dissect Keyne's work.
It was soon after this time that he worked with Austin Robinson to produce
the Statistical Digest. He also worked on the League of nations Financial
Section and Economic Intelligence Service with Ragnar Nurkse and
Jan Tinbergen,
among others. Theory of International Economic Policy A Geometry of International Trade |