David Bensusan-Butt

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David Miles Bensusan-Butt (24 July 1914, Colchester—25 March 1994, London) was an English economist who spent much of his career in Australia. Known as David, he published his work as D. M. Bensusan-Butt.

Background and education

A nephew of the French Impressionist painter Camille Pissarro, and the son of Dr Ruth Bensusan-Butt (1877–1957), the first woman doctor to work in Essex, Bensusan-Butt was educated at Gresham's School, Holt, and King's College, Cambridge, where he was a student of John Maynard Keynes and indexed Keynes's magnum opus, the General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money. Bensusan-Butt acted as an assistant to Keynes, for searching literature and writing references, making him Keynes's best-informed student on progress with the project, so that one historian of economics has described him as 'the favoured man'.[1]

Career

After a short period working for The Economist, Bensusan-Butt joined the civil service in 1938. Early in the Second World War he became private secretary to Frederick Lindemann, 1st Viscount Cherwell, then worked for Winston Churchill. While he was First Lord of the Admiralty, Churchill created a Statistical Section in the Admiralty which was joined by Bensusan-Butt, Roy Harrod, Bryan Hopkin, Douglas MacDougall and Tom Wilson.[2]

At Lindemann's instigation Butt was responsible for the analysis of the RAF's bombing campaign that showed to Churchill the poor results that were actually being achieved.

Bensusan-Butt later joined the Royal Navy, serving on the minelayer HMS Cyclone.

Following the war, Butt moved to the Economic Section of the Cabinet Office and later the Treasury. In 1949-1950 he was seconded to the Australian Prime Minister's Department, and he spent two periods of one year at Nuffield College, Oxford as a research fellow, in 1953-1954 and 1958-1959.

In 1962, he became a Professorial Fellow in the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies (RSPAS) of the Australian National University, remaining there for fifteen years. In 1975-1976 he was the most influential member of the Asprey Committee on tax reform, recommending a dramatic change from a complicated system of income taxes to a broad-based consumption tax.

In 1976, he retired to London, settling in part of the 17th century house at Stamford Brook of his uncle by marriage Camille Pissarro.

Selected publications

  • On Economic Growth: an Essay in Pure Theory (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1960)[3]
  • On Economic Man: an Essay on the Elements of Economic Theory (Canberra: Australian National University, 1978)
  • 'A Model of Trade and Accumulation' in American Economic Review 44 (1954), pp. 511–529
  • 'Keynes's General Theory, Then and Now', in On Economic Knowledge, a sceptical legacy ed. D. M. Bensusan Butt (Canberra: Australian National University, 1967)[4]

Quotations

  • "The ultimate fruits of civilization are slow growths that need a stable environment."[5]

References

  1. Keith Tribe, Economic careers: economics and economists in Britain, 1930-1970 (1997), p. 61
  2. Philip Mirowski & Dieter Plehwe, The Road from Mont Pelerin: The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective (2009), p. 82
  3. On Economic Growth: An Essay in Pure Theory at questia.com
  4. Allin Cottrell & Michael S. Lawlor, New Perspectives on Keynes (1995), p. 238
  5. Terence Wilmot Hutchison, Positive economics and policy objectives (1964), p. 152
  • David Bensusan-Butt, 1914-1994 by H. W. Arndt & R. M. Sundrum in The Economic Journal vol. 105, no. 430, May 1995, pp. 669–675
  • Obituary at The Independent, 5 April 1994