Yesterday came news of the death of Professor Kenneth John Galbraith at the age of 97 [one-time at Harvard].
By all accounts and assessments he is regarded by those in the know as one of the greatest economists of the 20th century. But he wasn't a dry and boring economist in the usual mould. He advised a number of Presidents, was a prolific author and writer and at one time was the US ambassador to India.
For instance, as the BBC points our in its report:
"Many of Professor Galbraith's phrases - "affluent society", "conventional wisdom" and "countervailing power" - have become part of common language."
Read the BBC piece [here] about an interesting man - whose influence will seemingly live long after his death.
In its piece on Galbraith's death the NYT [here] describes the man as someone who held "a mirror to society".
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