Eugen Slutsky
Evgeny "Eugen" Evgenievich Slutsky was a Russian and Soviet mathematical statistician, economist and political economist. He is primarily known for the Slutsky equation and the Slutsky–Yule effect.
Early life
Slutsky studied in the department of physics and mathematics at Kiev University. In 1901, he was expelled from the university and conscripted into the army for participating in student protests. He was allowed to return to his studies, but was again expelled in 1902 and prohibited from studying at any university in the Russian Empire.From 1902 to 1905, he studied in the department of engineering at the Technical University of Munich. He was allowed to resume studies in the Russian Empire in 1905 where he enrolled in department of law at Kiev University where he sought to apply mathematics in economics research. He graduated in 1911 with a gold medal.
In 1917, he received a degree in political economy from the University of Moscow.
Academic career
In 1911, he joined the faculty at Kiev Institute of Commerce. He became full professor in 1920.In 1926, he began working for the Central Statistical Board in Moscow.
In 1934, he began working for the Mathematical Institute of the University of Moscow. In 1938, he became a member of the Mathematical Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the U.S.S.R.
Work in economics
Slutsky is principally known for work in deriving the relationships embodied in the Slutsky equation widely used in microeconomic consumer theory for separating the substitution effect and the income effect of a price change on the total quantity of a good demanded following a price change in that good, or in a related good that may have a cross-price effect on the original good quantity. There are many Slutsky analogs in producer theory.He is less well known by Western economists than some of his contemporaries, due to his own changing intellectual interests as well as external factors forced upon him after the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917. His seminal paper in Economics, and some argue his last paper in Economics rather than probability theory, was published in 1915. Paul Samuelson noted that until 1936, he had been entirely unaware of Slutsky's 1915 "masterpiece" due to World War I and the paper's Italian language publication. R. G. D. Allen did the most to propagate Slutsky's work on consumer theory in published papers in 1936 and 1950.
Vincent Barnett argues: