Richard M. Goodwin

Richard M. Goodwin (February 24, 1913 August 13, 1996) was an American mathematician and economist. He was born in New Castle, Indiana.[1]

Background

Goodwin received his BA and PhD at Harvard, and he taught there from 1942 until 1950. He taught at the University of Cambridge until 1979 and the University of Siena until 1984.[2] He was the first non-Italian professor of economics at Siena.[3] He described himself as "a lifelong but wayward Marxist",[4] joining the Communist Party of Great Britain while a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford in the 1930s, and then its American counterpart when back he got back to the States.[5] He left after the announcement of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact.[5]

Work

Goodwin worked on the interaction between long run growth and business cycles. His article on "matrix multiplier" was one of the earliest uses of the Perron–Frobenius theorem in economics, although his reasoning had an error that was diagnosed by Frank H. Hahn. He returned to the Perron–Frobenius theorem with his book on The dynamics of a capitalist economy.

Goodwin adopted the Lotka–Volterra equations for the population dynamics of a predator and prey species as a persistent model of economic growth, called the "Goodwin model" (or "Goodwin's Class-Struggle Model"). In his model, employed workers have the role of predators, as their wage demands squeeze profits and hence investment, leading to an increase in unemployment. Another model, "Goodwin's Non-Linear Accelerator", is also a model of endogenous cycles in economic activity; the cycles do not rely on outside shocks or structurally unstable parameters. "A Growth Cycle" (1967) saw Goodwin utilise Volterra's equations to formalise Marx's theory of economic cycles.[6]

Major articles

For more details on Richard Goodwin's professional contributions see:

1) Nonlinear and Mutisectoral Macrodynamics: Essays in Honour of Richard Goodwin. (ed. K. Velupillai), Macmillan, London, 1989.

2) “The Vintage Economist”, The Journal of Economic Behaviour and Organisation, Vol.37, No.1, Sep., pp. 1–31, 1998.

3) “Richard Goodwin: 1913-1996”, The Economic Journal, Vol. 108, September, 1998, pp. 1436–1449.

References

Notes
  1. K. Vela Velupillai (9 August 1996). "Obituary: Professor Richard Goodwin". independent.co.uk. Retrieved 11 May 2013.
  2. Di Matteo, Filippi & Sordi 2006.
  3. Harcourt 1985, p. 410.
  4. Screpanti & Zamagni 2005, p. 473: "The other great heretic of this generation of economists is Richard M. Goodwin, the 'deviant Marxist', as he defined himself."
  5. 5.0 5.1 Harcourt 1985, p. 412.
  6. Screpanti & Zamagni 2005, p. 474.
Bibliography
  • Di Matteo, Massimo; Filippi, Francesco; Sordi, Serena (2006). "The confessions of an unrepentant model builder: Rummaging in Goodwin's Archive". Structural Change and Economic Dynamics 17 (4): 400–414. doi:10.1016/j.strueco.2006.08.008.
  • Harcourt, G. C. (1985). "A twentieth-century eclectic: Richard Goodwin". Journal of Post Keynesian Economics 7 (3): 410–421. JSTOR 4537899.
  • Screpanti, Ernesto; Zamagni, Stefano (2005). An Outline of the History of Economic Thought (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-199-27913-5.

Further reading