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  1. Lloyd Appleton Metzler (3 April 1913 – 26 October 1980) was an American economist best known for his contributions to international trade theory. He was born in Lost Springs , Kansas in 1913. Although most of his career was spent at the University of Chicago , he was not a member of the Chicago school , but rather a Keynesian .

  2. Jan 1, 2023 · However, in contrast to Friedman’s outright monetarism, Metzler was a supporter of a post-Keynesian synthesis which contained elements of both the Keynesian system and classical economics where the question of whether monetary policy affects the interest rate depends on how such policy is conducted (see Niehans 1978: 85–86). At the same ...

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  3. to celebrate Metzler’s 60th birthday, which mostly contained pieces written between 1941 and 1951 (Metzler 1973). A Festschrift entitled . Trade, Stability, and Macroeconomics: Essays in Honor of Lloyd A. Metzler. 2. Given his Keynesian sympathies, it is unclear why Metzler did not return to Harvard after the war,

  4. Lloyd A. Metzler, 1913-1980. Neo-Keynesian macroeconomist and international trade theorist at Chicago. Originating from Kansas, Lloyd Appleton Metzler obtained his first degrees at the University of Kansas, before enrolling for graduate studies at Harvard in 1938. Metzler received his Ph.D. in 1942, and worked in Washington during WWII, After ...

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  6. Early Metzler: formal I. An early formal development of the keynesian model of an open economy was Lloyd Metzler's thesis (submitted at Harvard University in 1942), from which two chapters were published in the journals. The two papers are clearly of a piece.

  7. Critical Associates and Contributors to the Keynesian Theory and Policy. Lloyd A. Metzler, 1913-1980. Wassily Leontief, 1906-1999; Tibor de Scitovsky, 1910-

  8. Lloyd Appleton Metzler was an American economist best known for his contributions to international trade theory. He was born in Lost Springs, Kansas in 1913. Although most of his career was spent at the University of Chicago, he was not a member of the Chicago school, but rather a Keynesian.

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