Aleksandr Finn-Enotaevsky
Aleksandr Yule'vich Finn-Enotaevsky (1872, Kaunas – 1943) was a Soviet economist.
Finn-Enotaevsky was an active Bolshevik until 1915 when he decided to focus his attention on his career as an academic economist, becoming a professor in the subject. He was on friendly terms with Vladimir Groman and Nikolai Kondratiev.
He was one of the defendants at the 1931 Menshevik Trial. He received a sentence for ten years.[1][2]
He died in Karagandy Province and was rehabilitated in 1991.[3]
Publications
- The current economy of Russia (1890 - 1910 years) St Petersburg: Semenova, (1911)
- Present Situation of the World Economy, (1920)
- Новые идеи в экономике (New ideas in economics), (1925)
- Finansovy kapital i proizvoditelny, (1926)
gollark: Put a tape drive beside the ĸomputer.
gollark: The nice thing about 3rot13 is that you can't lose access to your data by losing the key.
gollark: Yes, Galaxtone, it is a symmetric stateless keyless cipher.
gollark: You're right, PG231, but you can't run it as well on non-textual data.
gollark: So it's Encrypt-then-MAC/CBC-then-Lolcrypt-then-3rot13, you see.
References
- Naum Jasny, Soviet economists of the twenties (Soviet Economists of the Twenties ed.), Cambridge, Eng, ISBN 0521083028, OCLC 279124, 0521083028
- "MOSCOW TRIAL ENDS". Aberdeen Journal. British Newspaper Archive. 10 March 1931. Retrieved 16 May 2015.
- http://lists.memo.ru/d34/f123.htm
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