This paper revisits a significant moment in the intellectualexchange between Roy Harrod and John Maynard Keynes: theearly months of 1937. Archival sources—including the involve-ment of Dennis Robertson—document their fertile discussion ofHarrod’s The Trade Cycle (1936) and Keynes’s Galton Lecture(1937). Textual evidence reveals converging reflections on tech-nical progress, demographic change, and the macroeconomic roleof public policy. Although the two works address distinct analyt-ical horizons, the paper shows a reciprocal intellectual influencebetween Harrod and Keynes, highlighting their shared effort toextend macroeconomic analysis beyond the short-run frameworkof The General Theory.
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Alice Martini
University of Pisa
Luca Spataro
University of Pisa
European Journal of the History of Economic Thought
University of Pisa
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Martini et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69a761eac6e9836116a2fff9 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/09672567.2026.2628537