Cambridge economists believed that pure economics involved a component of economic history and that the two were inseparably entangled.
One Cambridge economist called it "a long sorry descent into techno-babble."
He is also the biographer and literary executor of the famous Cambridge economist Nicholas Kaldor.
Cambridge economists, including Keynes, began to challenge this assumption.
By factoring in the value of holding cash, the Cambridge economists took significant steps toward the concept of liquidity preference that Keynes would later develop.
Michael Murphy, a Cambridge economist, reported that in 1989 the average income from organic farms was £1,000, though a few made as much as £8,000 profit.
Richard Goodwin was also part of this brilliant group of Cambridge economists, and exerted the first important influence on Pasinetti.
The Cambridge economists also thought wealth would play a role, but wealth is often omitted for simplicity.
He was also a classmate of noted Cambridge economist A.C. Pigou.
But Robert, on that evening, was dipping back to a famous essay by the great Cambridge economist.