Edward Thomas Nevin
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Edward Thomas Nevin | |
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Born | 25 February 1925 Pembroke Dock, Wales |
Died | 11 September 1992 (aged 67) Swansea, Wales |
Nationality | Welsh |
Alma mater | University College of Wales, Aberystwyth; Corpus Christi College, Cambridge |
Known for | Monetary policy and analysis; Preparation of the first Welsh national accounts; Work with the Hon Noel Nethersole in foundation of the Bank of Jamaica; Authorship of the Textbook of Economic Analysis, standard A-level text in Wales; Contribution to popular understanding of economic issues through broadcasts and press articles. |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Economics |
Institutions | University College of Wales, Aberystwyth; University College of Swansea |
Edward Thomas Nevin (born 5 February 1925, died 11 September 1992) was a British economist who was Professor of Economics at the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth, between 1963 and 1968 and at the University College of Swansea between 1968 and 1992.
After leaving school at the age of sixteen in 1941, he worked with the Ministry of Aircraft Production in Harrogate. He joined the Corps of the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers (REME) in 1943. Following demobilisation in October 1946 he took up a place at the University College of Wales, Aberystwyth under a post-war programme to fund the higher education of ex-servicemen, graduating with First Class Honours in Law and Economics in 1949. He completed a postgraduate dissertation on ‘The Market for Gilt-Edged Securities 1939-1949’ in 1950, a detailed analysis of the gilt-edged market over the previous decade, which concluded by correctly forecasting higher inflation and gilt-edged yields during the 1950s.[1]
In 1950, he secured a Houblon-Norman Fellowship at the University of Cambridge, where his doctoral research covered British monetary policy during the 1930s. Published as ‘The Mechanism of Cheap Money’ (1955), it is regarded as an authoritative work on British monetary policy during that period. His analysis demonstrated that low interest rates that followed the Wall Street Crash of 1929, the collapse of the Gold Standard in 1931 and the War Loan Conversion of 1932 stimulated economic recovery in Britain during the 1930s.
Returning to Aberystwyth as a lecturer in Economics, he published a monograph on ‘The Problem of the National Debt’ in 1954, which advocated that the UK’s National Debt should be restructured into distinct classes according to its ownership, with four separate tranches issued to government departments, commercial banks, other regulated financial institutions, and general investors.[1][2]
Three principles emerge from Nevin’s early research on monetary policy and the management of public debt. The first is that a combination of cheap money and loose fiscal policy is likely to lead to rising inflation and interest rates, as happened during the late 1940s. The second is that a cheap money policy targeted at keeping interest rates low can be sustained if the government runs a primary budget surplus, as during the 1930s. The third principle is that, if the government consistently runs a budget deficit, the National Debt will increase and investors are likely to require higher interest rates to induce them to buy Government bonds, squeezing funds for other public services.
In 1957, on the recommendation of Sir John Hicks, Nevin was appointed Head of External Finance in the Jamaican Ministry of Finance as part of a team under the island’s Finance Minister, the Hon Noel Newton Nethersole. This period inspired his book ‘Capital Funds in Underdeveloped Countries’,[3] dedicated to Mr Nethersole, which set out a blueprint for the role that a Central Bank should play in an emerging economy, extending beyond the management of a nation’s currency and the regulation of its banking system. The Jamaican model envisages that a Central Bank will take an active role in the development of a nation’s financial institutions and its bond and stock markets.[4]
In February 1959, Nevin was part of a four-man Jamaican Government team led by Mr Nethersole which travelled to New York to issue the first sovereign bond of the Government of Jamaica, raising US $12.5 million, equivalent to some $200 million in today’s prices. This was the first sovereign bond issued by any British colony, and the funds raised helped the Jamaican Government to fund free primary education for all Jamaican children, affordable credits for farmers, and enhanced healthcare provision.
In 1968, Nevin moved to Swansea as Head of the Economics Department, a post which had been vacant since the departure of E. Victor Morgan the previous year.[5] There, his administrative responsibilities left less time for research, although he acted as Adviser to the Police Federation in its pay negotiations with the Government during the 1970s and 1980s. He published a pioneering report, ‘The Pay of the Policeman’, that applied econometric techniques to estimate the level of pay that police officers would need to earn in order to attract and retain an independently specified number of officers. The independent variables driving the computation included the average level of industrial wages, the number of police cadets being trained, and the rate of unemployment.
His Aberystwyth colleague Professor George Clayton concluded his obituary of Nevin published in the ‘Independent’ by observing that he was “a man of many exceptional talents who made a distinctive contribution in so many spheres, but I am sure that he would most like to be remembered as a university teacher who conceived of his task as being 'to open up the mind, to correct it, to refine it, to enable it to know'.”[6]
Books and Monographs in Chronological Order
- Edward Nevin, The Market in Gilt-Edged Securities, September 1939-December 1949, A dissertation submitted for the degree of Master of Arts of the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, 1950
- Edward Nevin, The Problem of the National Debt, Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 1954
- Edward Nevin (Ed), The Social Accounts of the Welsh Economy 1948-1952, Cardiff, University of Wales Press, Welsh Economic Studies No 1, 1954
- Edward Nevin, The Mechanism of Cheap Money, Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 1955
- Edward Nevin (Ed), The Social Accounts of the Welsh Economy 1948-1956, Cardiff, University of Wales Press, Welsh Economic Studies No 2, 1957
- Edward Nevin, Textbook of economic analysis, London, Macmillan, 1st edition 1958, 2nd edition 1963, 3rd edition 1967, 4th edition 1976; Irish edition 1965
- Edward Nevin, Capital Funds in Underdeveloped Countries: The Role of Financial Institutions, London, Macmillan & Co, 1963
- Edward Nevin, The Growth of the Welsh Economy, Denbigh, Transactions of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion, 1966
- Edward Nevin, A.R. Roe, and J.I. Round, The Structure of the Welsh Economy, Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 1966, Welsh Economic Studies No 4
- Edward Nevin, Waiting for Godot, inaugural lecture at the University College of Swansea, 1969
- Edward Nevin and E.W. Davis, The London Clearing Banks, London, Elek Books, 1970
- Edward Nevin, Introduction to Microeconomics, London, Croom Helm, 1973
- Edward Nevin, The Pay of the Policeman, Police Federation of England and Wales, London, 1975
- Edward Nevin, The Economics of Europe, London, Macmillan, 1990
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Nevin, Michael (2024). Edward Nevin: An impression of his life, times and legacy. Edinburgh, UK: Triquetra Publishing (published 30 May 2024). pp. Ch 2, pp. 35-45. ISBN 978-1963748925.
- ↑ Nevin, Edward (1954). The Problem of the National Debt. Wales, UK: The University of Wales Press.
- ↑ Nevin, Edward (1963). Capital Funds in Underdeveloped Countries: The Role of Financial Institutions. London, Uk: Macmillan & Co.
- ↑ Nevin, Edward (2024). Edward Nevin: An impression of his life, times and legacy. Edinburgh, UK: Triquetra Publishing (published 30 May 2024). pp. Ch. 4, pp 72-84. ISBN 978-1963748925.
- ↑ Nevin, Edward (1975). The Pay of the Policeman. London, UK: Police Federation of England and Wales.
- ↑ Clayton, George (1992). "Obituary: Professor E. T. Nevin". The Independent. Retrieved 12 February 2025.
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