Brian Reddaway
William Brian Reddaway,
Biography
Born on 8 January 1913, he was the son of the historian
After graduating in 1934,[1] he worked at the Bank of England, during which time he visited the Soviet Union and produced a book on its financial system.[2] In 1936, he was appointed to a research fellowship in economics at the University of Melbourne,[1] where he worked under L. F. Giblin. He gave evidence to the Commonwealth Arbitration Court in which he advocated for Australian miners' wages to be increased; when this was approved (as the 1937 Basic Wage Judgement), it was informally called the "Reddawage".[3][4]
Reddaway left the university in 1938 to take up a fellowship at Clare College, Cambridge, where he remained until 2002.[5] He was also appointed a lecturer in the University of Cambridge in 1939. He worked at the Board of Trade during the Second World War (where he developed clothes rationing and worked as a statistician), returning to his academic duties in 1947. He was director of the Department of Applied Economics at Cambridge from 1955 to 1969. He was also promoted to a readership in 1957 and to the Professorship of Political Economy in 1969, in which chair he remained until he retired in 1980.[1]
Reddaway produced studies of government
Reddaway died on 23 July 2002; his wife Barbara Augusta, née Bennett (with whom he had four children), had died in 1996.[8]
References
- ^ The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed., Oxford University Press, 2008). Retrieved 1 April 2021.
- ^ a b Ajit Singh, "William Brian Reddaway, 1913–2002", Proceedings of the British Academy, vol. 138 (2006), p. 288.
- ^ Singh (2006), pp. 288–289.
- G. C. Harcourt, "Reddaway, [William] Brian (1913–2002)", in G. C. Harcourt (ed.), On Skidelsky's Keynes and Other Essays: Selected Essays of G. C. Harcourt (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), p. 296.
- ^ Singh (2006), p. 285.
- ^ Singh (2006), p. 300.
- ^ Supplement to the London Gazette, 12 June 1971 (no. 45384), p. 5965.
- ^ Singh (2006), pp. 289, 306.