NettetHollis Burnley Chenery was an American economist well known for his pioneering contribution in the field of development economics. Background Chenery was born on … Nettet1. feb. 1983 · Hollis Burnley Chenery was born January 6, 1918 in Richmond, Virginia. He received a Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University in 1950. From 1949 - 1950, he …
VIAF ID: 88339185 ( Personal ) - Virtual International Authority File
NettetTitle Industrialization and growth : a comparative study / Hollis Chenery, Sherman Robinson, Moshe Syrquin ; with contributions by Gershon Feder...[et al.]. Call number. IBRD(02)/C3. Authors Chenery, Hollis Burnley Robinson, Sherman Syrquin, Moshe. IBRD. Series World Bank research publication. Hollis Burnley Chenery (January 6, 1918 – September 1, 1994) was an American economist well known for his pioneering contribution in the field of development economics. Se mer Chenery was born in Richmond, son of Christopher Chenery, a businessman and horseman. He was educated in Virginia, Pelham Manor, New York and at the University of Arizona (BSc Mathematics, 1939), the Se mer He worked as a professor of economics at Stanford from 1952 to 1961, as a Guggenheim fellow in 1961 and joined the United States Agency for International Development in … Se mer After his father died in January 1973, his sister Penny Chenery raced Secretariat on behalf of the family. Secretariat became the first horse in 25 … Se mer His major works include: • Chenery, Hollis. (1952). Overcapacity and the acceleration principle., Econometrica • Abramovitz, Moses (1959), "The welfare interpretation of … Se mer ufile can\\u0027t be downloaded securely
Redistribution with Growth: The Economic Framework
NettetPedagogy of Computer Science (B1615 cs) Contract (103) Engineering Physics (PHY1001) Newest LL.B. Case study list Practical training (LLB - 04) Laws of Torts 1st Semester - 1st Year - 3 Year LL.B. (Laws of Torts LAW 01) MA ENGLISH Database Management System (CS404PC) Calculus And Linear Algebra (18MAB101T) … Nettetbut not forgotten in the next chapter by Ahluwalia and Hollis Chenery. Hypotheses are advanced by Ahluwalia as to why there are so many poor: (1) Population is growing more rapidly in the lower than in the higher income groups, leading to dilution of capital at the bottom of the income spectrum; (2) average savings rates are greater in the slower Nettet10. mai 2014 · Hollis B. Chenery Academic Press, May 10, 2014 - Law - 610 pages 0 Reviews Reviews aren't verified, but Google checks for and removes fake content … thomasea shipbuilding