File:Professor A.W.H (Bill) Phillips.jpg

页面内容不支持其他语言。
這個文件來自維基共享資源
维基百科,自由的百科全书

原始文件(600 × 783像素,文件大小:81 KB,MIME类型:image/jpeg


摘要

描述

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...
日期
来源

Professor A.W.H (Bill) Phillips

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

许可协议

本图像是从Flickr公众相簿计画取得而来。该上传组织可能有多种理由认定该影像无已知版权限制,例如:
  1. 该图像因版权过期属于公有领域;
  2. 该图像因其他原因(如未能遵守办理所需的手续或不符合相关条件)而释出至公有领域;
  3. 该图像的持有机构拥有版权,但对于其控制权不感兴趣;或
  4. 该图像的持有机构拥有授权无限制使用其图像的法定权利。

更多资讯请参见 https://flickr.com/commons/usage/


如果该图像拥有特定且决定性的版权资讯,请在该影像新增额外的版权标签。更多资讯请参见Commons:Licensing
此张图片原发布于Flickr,在May 29, 2011由管理员审查员File Upload Bot (Magnus Manske)检查后,确认检查时图片在Flickr的版权声明与维基共享资源的版权使用方针相符。
相机位置51° 30′ 51.9″ 北, 0° 07′ 00.88″ 西 Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.在以下服务上查看本图像和附近其他图像: OpenStreetMapinfo

说明

添加一行文字以描述该文件所表现的内容

此文件中描述的项目

描繪內容

某些值没有维基数据项目

作者姓名字符串:​Library of the London School of Economics and Political Science

無已知著作權限制 Chinese (Taiwan)(已转写)

無已知著作權限制 Chinese (Taiwan)(已转写)

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

文件历史

点击某个日期/时间查看对应时刻的文件。

日期/时间缩⁠略⁠图大小用户备注
当前2011年5月29日 (日) 12:242011年5月29日 (日) 12:24版本的缩略图600 × 783(81 KB)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版本的缩略图600 × 783(77 KB)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2个页面使用本文件:

全域文件用途

以下其他wiki使用此文件:

元数据