A. W. Phillips

E245473

A. W. Phillips was a New Zealand-born economist best known for formulating the relationship between unemployment and wage/price inflation that became known as the Phillips curve.

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A. W. Phillips canonical 1

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Predicate Object
instanceOf economist
person
academicAdvisor James Meade
conflict World War II
surface form: Second World War
countryOfCitizenship New Zealand
dateOfBirth 1914-11-18
dateOfDeath 1975-03-04
developed hydraulic economic computer MONIAC
educatedAt University of Canterbury
surface form: Canterbury University College

London School of Economics
University of Melbourne
employer London School of Economics
familyName Phillips
fieldOfWork econometrics
economic theory
macroeconomics
fullName Alban William Housego Phillips
givenName Alban
William
honor Fellow of the British Academy
influenced Keynesian economics
macroeconomic policy analysis
monetary policy debates
knownFor MONIAC hydraulic computer
Phillips curve framework
surface form: Phillips curve

relationship between unemployment and price inflation
relationship between unemployment and wage inflation
language English
memberOf British Academy
militaryService served in Asia during World War II
nationality New Zealander
notableWork The Relation between Unemployment and the Rate of Change of Money Wage Rates in the United Kingdom, 1861–1957
occupation engineer
professor of economics
statistician
placeOfBirth Te Rehunga, near Dannevirke, New Zealand
placeOfDeath Auckland
surface form: Auckland, New Zealand
prisonerOfWar held by Japanese forces during World War II
publicationYear 1958
researchInterest inflation
macroeconomic stabilization
unemployment
servedIn Royal Air Force
spouse Frieda Phillips
workLocation Auckland
surface form: Auckland, New Zealand

Canberra
surface form: Canberra, Australia

London, England
surface form: London, United Kingdom

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