ABSTRACT

First Published in 1994. Nicholas Kaldor was born in Hungary in 1908 and died as Baron Kaldor of Newnham in the City of Cambridge, England, in 1986. The years between revealed no hint of scandal or psychological problems that might make Kaldor the subject of a novel. His life was, instead, a straight line of growth and achievement, of intellectual enjoyment and strong values. Kaldor's struggles were intellectual-namely, his efforts to comprehend the economics of the real world, to fit this understanding into economic theory, and to convince his fellow citizens and economists of the accuracy of his perceptions. Kaldor forces us to ponder what the relationship between economic theory and practice should be.

part |4 pages

Nicholas Kaldor and the Real World

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

part I|28 pages

Becoming a Theoretician

chapter One|7 pages

Nicholas Kaldor in Retrospect

chapter Two|6 pages

Moral Scientist and Keynesian

chapter Three|8 pages

Early Theoretical Pronouncements

chapter Four|5 pages

World War II and Cambridge University

part II|30 pages

Applying Theory in the Real World

chapter Five|7 pages

Analyzing and Planning for Recovery

chapter Seven|13 pages

Tax Advice, LDCs, and Riots

part III|48 pages

Practicing Political Economics

chapter Eight|11 pages

Joining the Government

chapter Nine|13 pages

Opposing British Entry into the Common Market

chapter Ten|22 pages

Exposing Monetarism

part IV|36 pages

Constructing Post Keynesian Theory

chapter Eleven|13 pages

New Approaches to Growth and Distribution Theory

chapter Twelve|6 pages

Debating Kaldorian Distribution Theory

chapter Thirteen|5 pages

Emerging Policy Views

chapter Fourteen|10 pages

The Watershed of 1966

part V|14 pages

Where Kaldor Stood

chapter Fifteen|5 pages

Economics Without Equilibrium

chapter Sixteen|7 pages

Kaldor's View of the World