ファイル:Professor A.W.H (Bill) Phillips.jpg

ウィキペディアから無料の百科事典

元のファイル(600 × 783 ピクセル、ファイルサイズ: 81キロバイト、MIME タイプ: image/jpeg)

概要

解説

Extracts from ‘The Phillips Machine Project’ by Nicholas Bar, LSE Magazine, June 1988, No75, p.3

A.W. H. ‘Bill’ Phillips is known worldwide as the originator of the Phillips Curve. Less well known is the remarkable man he was personally, and his extraordinary route to academic prominence via what came to be called the Phillips Machine.

Trained as an electrical engineer in his native New Zealand in the 1930s, he caught the travel bug and took up an engineering job in the Australian outback, where he also earned money by running a cinema and hunting crocodiles. He reached London in 1938 via the Trans-Siberian railway and joined the RAF at the outbreak of war. He was captured in Java and spent most of the war in a Japanese POW camp, where he learned Chinese and some Russian from fellow prisoners.

Back in Britain he took the BSc (Econ) 1946-49, special subject sociology. He developed a great interest in economics…and like many of his generation, became very caught up with Keynesian theory. Though fascinated he found the Keynesian model hard going. With Walter Newlyn (an undergraduate contemporary, later Professor of Economics at Leeds University) to help with the economic theory, he fell back on his engineering training. He saw that money stocks could be represented as tanks of water, and monetary flows by water circulating round plastic tubes.

With a grant of £100 (obtained with Newlyn’s help) he spent the summer of 1949 in a garage in Croydon ‘living on air’ as James Meade was later to put it, working on a hydraulic representation of the Keynesian model.

In the machine he constructed, the circular flow of income was represented by water being pumped round a series of clear plastic tubes, with outflows representing savings, taxes and imports, and inflows representing investment, government spending and exports. The model had three tanks representing the stock of money, one for transaction balances and one for foreign-held sterling balances. The whole system determined the level of income, the rate of interest, imports, exports and the exchange to an accuracy (astonishing at the time) of +two per cent. The time path of income and the other variables was traced out by plotter pens making it possible to analyse the quantitative effects of economic policy.

The machine, in the jargon, was a hydraulic representation of an open economy IS-LM model with an explicit underlying dynamic structure. It was this very Heath Robinson prototype which, with the enthusiastic support of James Meade (then Professor of Commerce at the School), Phillips demonstrated to Lionel Robbins’ seminar in November 1949. Those attending gazed in wonder at this large (7ft high x 5ft wide x 3ft deep) ‘thing’ in the middle of the room. Phillips, chain smoking, paced back and forth explaining it in a heavy New Zealand drawl, in the process giving one of the best lectures on Keynes that anyone in the audience had ever heard. Then he switched the machine on. And it worked! According to Lord Robbins’ recollections, “there was income dividing itself into consumption and saving…Keynes and Robertson need never have quarrelled if they had had the Phillips Machine before them”…Phillips was made an Assistant Lecturer in Economics in 1950, Lecturer 1951, Reader 1954, and Tooke Professor of Economic Science and Statistics in 1958 (the year his Phillips Curve paper was published). He took up a Chair at the Australian National University in 1967 and, having suffered a major stroke, retired to Auckland in 1970, where he died five years later aged 60, mourned by many friends for personal as much for professional reasons.’


IMAGELIBRARY/244

Persistent URL: archives.lse.ac.uk/dserve.exe?dsqServer=lib-4.lse.ac.uk&a...
日付
原典

Professor A.W.H (Bill) Phillips

  • Uploaded by
作者 Library of the London School of Economics and Political Science

ライセンス

この画像はFlickrのThe Commonsから提供されています。Flickrにアップロードした組織は次のような理由などから「著作権上の制限無し」と分類することがあります。
  1. 著作権の保護期間が満了しているため、パブリックドメインの状態に置かれている。
  2. (著作権保護を得るための著作権表示が)必要な形式や条件に沿うことができていないなど、1. 以外の理由でパブリックドメインに置かれている。
  3. アップロードした組織が著作権を保持するが、著作権の行使に興味が無い。
  4. アップロードした組織が、制限無しに著作物を利用することを他者に許可するのに十分な法的権利を有する。

詳しい情報は https://flickr.com/commons/usage/ をご覧ください。


著作権の状態について明確な情報を決定できる場合は更なる著作権タグを追加してください。詳しくはCommons:ライセンシングをご覧ください。
当初、Flickrに投稿されたこの画像は、May 29, 2011に管理者又は画像査読者File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske)によって査読され、その時点で、Flickr上で記載されたライセンスの下で利用可能であることが確認されました。
カメラの位置51° 30′ 51.9″ 北, 0° 07′ 00.88″ 西 Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.以下のサービスでこの位置を確認する: オープンストリートマップinfo

キャプション

このファイルの内容を1行で記述してください

このファイルに描写されている項目

題材

ウィキデータ項目がない値

16 9 2009

51°30'51.904962186381"N, 0°7'0.883655548097"W

ファイルの履歴

過去の版のファイルを表示するには、その版の日時をクリックしてください。

日付と時刻サムネイル寸法利用者コメント
現在の版2011年5月29日 (日) 12:242011年5月29日 (日) 12:24時点における版のサムネイル600 × 783 (81キロバイト)Remove scratches on photo, obvious artefacts and reduce lens blur.
2011年5月29日 (日) 01:512011年5月29日 (日) 01:51時点における版のサムネイル600 × 783 (77キロバイト)File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske){{Information |Description=Extracts from ‘The Phillips Machine Project’ by Nicholas Bar, LSE Magazine, June 1988, No75, p.3 A.W. H. ‘Bill’ Phillips is known worldwide as the originator of the Phillips Curve. Less well known is the remarkable man

以下のページがこのファイルを使用しています:

グローバルなファイル使用状況

以下に挙げる他のウィキがこの画像を使っています:

メタデータ