Selwyn Cornish Selwyn Cornish i(A105584 works by)
Gender: Male
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

Works By

Preview all
1 Alex Millmow’s Biography of the Economist Colin Clark Selwyn Cornish , 2022 single work review
— Appears in: History Australia , vol. 19 no. 2 2022; (p. 411-412)

— Review of The Gypsy Economist Alex Millmow , 2021 single work biography

'Colin Clark, the subject of this biography, was regarded as one of Australia’s most profound thinkers. The Economic Society of Australia chose him as the joint winner (with Trevor Swan) of its inaugural Distinguished Fellow award in 1987. The University of Queensland, where Clark held an honorary appointment in his final years, had such a high opinion of him that it named both the building housing its Economics Faculty and an annual public lecture in his honour. John Maynard Keynes referred to Clark as ‘a bit of a genius: almost the only economic statistician I have ever met who seems to me quite first class’ (Moggridge (ed.), The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, vol. XXIX, 1979, 57). Several universities, including Monash, Queensland, Milan and Tilburg, awarded him honorary degrees. Among his major contributions to economics was the concept of Gross National Product or GNP. He was also a founder of development economics: the World Bank included Clark among its top 10 pioneers of development economics.'(Introduction) 

1 2 y separately published work icon Arndt's Story : The Life of an Australian Economist Peter Coleman , Selwyn Cornish , Peter Drake , Canberra : Asia Pacific Press , 2007 Z1386137 2007 single work biography

'The year of Heinz Wolfgang Arndt’s birth, 1915, was not a good time for a German boy to be born. His country was soon to be defeated in a great war, his school years were shadowed by the rise of Hitler. Yet when Heinz’s long-buried Jewish background led his academic father to lose his chair in chemistry and flee to Oxford, Heinz followed. As Heinz put it, the calamity of Hitler’s rise to power led him to ‘the incredible good fortune of an Oxford education and a life spent in England and Australia.’

'This was a man of inexhaustible energy and optimism, who returned from months behind barbed wire interned in Canada to write a historical classic—The Economic Lessons of the Nineteen-Thirties. He seized the opportunity of an unexpected job offer to set off with his young family for Sydney where he quickly established himself as a leading authority on the Australian banking system, embarked on his fifty year career as a gifted university teacher and enjoyed the first of many vigorous forays as a public intellectual.

'But it was at ANU that Heinz took the bold step which led him to become the Grand Old Man of Asian Economics. In 1966, just after the Sukarno coup and the year of living dangerously, he determined the time had come to study the Indonesian economy. It took all his charm, persistence and formidable intellect to persuade the Indonesians to open their doors to him. The result was a world-leading centre of Indonesian economics which greatly contributed to the development of modern Indonesia.'(Publication summary)

X