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The Treasury and the New Cambridge School in the 1970s
Authors
Cripps
J. Maloney
Tarling
Publication date
19 March 2013
Publisher
'Oxford University Press (OUP)'
Doi
Abstract
Pre-print issued as discussion paper by University of Exeter. The article has been accepted for publication in Cambridge Journal of Economics © The Author 2012. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Cambridge Political Economy Society. All rights reserved.With the release of Treasury papers from the 1970s under the 30-year rule we have a much more complete picture of the dispute in the 1970s between the Treasury and the Cambridge Economic Policy Group, especially given the role of three Cambridge economists -- Nicholas Kaldor, Wynne Godley and Francis Cripps – as ministerial advisers at the time. The records show the Treasury and the CEPG eventually meeting near the middle regarding the latter’s proposition of stable private-sector NAFA (Net Acquisition of Private Sector Assets) and its implications for demand management and the balance of payments. By contrast, the initial differences on counter-inflation policy and, above all, on import controls versus free trade were wider at the end of the decade than at the start of it
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Open Research Exeter
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oai:ore.exeter.ac.uk:10036/114...
Last time updated on 06/08/2013
Crossref
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info:doi/10.1093%2Fcje%2Fber04...
Last time updated on 03/12/2019