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  1. Sir Ralph George Hawtrey (22 November 1879, Slough – 21 March 1975, London) was a British economist, and a close friend of John Maynard Keynes. He was a member of the Cambridge Apostles, the University of Cambridge intellectual secret society.

  2. Ralph Hawtrey (born November 22, 1879, Slough, Buckinghamshire, England—died March 21, 1975, London) was a British economist who developed a concept that later became known as the multiplier. Hawtrey was educated at Eton and the University of Cambridge, graduating with first-class honours

  3. Jun 27, 2024 · This article considers the contributions of Ralph Hawtrey to monetary theory and macroeconomics, focusing on his monetary business cycle theory and his monetary explanation of the Great Depression.

  4. Feb 21, 2017 · 1 Introduction. Ralph Hawtrey published his first work in economics, Good and Bad Trade: An Enquiry into the Causes of Trade Fluctuations, in 1913, and his last, Incomes and Money, in 1967.

    • Patrick Deutscher
    • Patrick.deutscher@queensu.ca
    • 2017
  5. Jan 1, 2018 · Hawtrey, Ralph George (1879–1975) Reference work entry. First Online: 01 January 2018. pp 56645670. Cite this reference work entry. R. J. Bigg. 58 Accesses. Abstract. Hawtrey was born in Slough, near London, and went up to Trinity College, Cambridge, from Eton in 1898. Three years later he graduated 19th Wrangler in the Mathematical Tripos.

  6. Ralph G. Hawtrey, 1879-1971 British civil servant and monetary theorist. Although he never attended any of Marshall's lectures at Cambridge, Ralph Hawtrey has been considered a Marshallian economist.

  7. Oct 29, 2023 · Ralph George Hawtrey, born in 1879, two years before his friend, fellow Cambridge man and Apostle, John Maynard Keynes, with whom he often disagreed, was in the 1920s and early 1930s almost as well-known as, and perhaps even more influential, at least among economists and policy-makers, than Keynes.