Nikolai Kondratiev

Nikolai Kondratiev (1892-1938) was a Russian economist. He proposed a theory that Western capitalist economies have long term (40-60 year) cycles of boom followed by depression. These cycles are now called "Kondratiev waves". Kondratiev was arrested 1930. Stalin took a keen personal interest in Kondratiev's trial. As a distinguished economist with an international reputation Kondratiev was considered a threat to the regime. Kondratiev was forced to confess to imaginary crimes. Convicted as a "kulak-professor", he was banished to Suzdal in 1932. In 1938 he was issued a new sentence - ten years without the right to correspond with the outside world; this phrase was a code for a death sentence and Kondratiev was executed on the same day it was issued.

External link

Kondratiev, Nikolai Kondratiev, Nikolai Kondratiev, Nikolai

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
charles william russell
national bank of new zealand
nimitz
st. ann's school
miguel cairo
john stoltenberg
candaba, pampanga
john corbett
canadian bush party
janine turner
national association of probation officers
irish carbomb
keshia knight pulliam
philadelphia park racetrack
chinatown, vancouver
darko macan
john jensen
wagashi
dalibor perkovic
heat of solution
russia national football team
tatjana jambrisak
igor lepcin
carte manuscripts
linda gary
rob liefeld
james jesus angleton
rendaku
heat of dilution
uss donald cook (ddg 75)
vrttin
atacama border dispute
manuel ii
edwin denby (poet)
david alger
satsang
anthony philip heinrich
butch warren
jivaka chintamani
precious images
virgin gorda
11th amendment
unplugged (alice in chains)
south india