Abstract

Murray Kemp recalls his decision to study economics, his acquaintance with some founders of Australian academic economics at Melbourne University in the 1940s, his original intellectual influences, his choice of graduate school, his experiences at Cambridge, his difficulties in returning to Australia, his original Keynesian affiliation, the role of Haberler’s writings in his ‘conversion’ to neoclassical economics, his dissatisfaction with the revival of partial equilibrium trade theory, his mathematical style, his research that he judges to be the most successful, and his views on Australian academic life.

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