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Encyclopedia > Eli Heckscher

Eli Filip Heckscher (Stockholm November 24, 1879 - Stockholm December 23, 1952) was a Swedish political economist and economic historian.


Heckscher was born in Stockholm into a prominent Jewish family, son of the Danish-born businessman Isidor Heckscher and his spouse Rosa Meyer, and completed his secondary education there in 1897. He studied at university in Uppsala and Gothenburg, completing his PhD in Uppsala in 1907. He was professor of Political economy and Statistics at the Stockholm School of Economics from 1909 until 1929, when he exchanged that chair for a research professorship in economic history, finally retiring as emeritus professor in 1945.


According to a bibliography published in 1950, Heckscher had as of the previous year published 1148 books and articles, among which may be mentioned his study of Mercantilism, translated into several languages, and a monumental Economic history of Sweden in several volumes.


Eli Heckscher's son was Gunnar Heckscher (1909-1987), political scientist and leader of the Swedish Conservative party (Högerpartiet) 1961-1965.


Reference

  • Bertil Ohlin, "Heckscher, Eli Filip", Svenskt biografiskt lexikon, vol. 18, pp. 376-381.

  Results from FactBites:
 
Bertil Ohlin - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (756 words)
In 1930 Ohlin succeeded Eli Heckscher, his teacher, as a professor of economics, at the Stockholm School of Economics.
In this Ohlin built an economic theory of international trade from earlier work by Heckscher and his own doctoral thesis.
It is now known as the Heckscher-Ohlin model, one of the standard model economists use to debate trade theory.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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