Aleksandr Finn-Enotaevsky

Aleksandr Yule'vich Finn-Enotaevsky (1872, Kaunas – 1943) was a Soviet economist.

Finn-Enotaevsky was an active Bolshevik until 1915 when he decided to focus his attention on his career as an academic economist, becoming a professor in the subject. He was on friendly terms with Vladimir Groman and Nikolai Kondratiev.

He was one of the defendants at the 1931 Menshevik Trial. He received a sentence for ten years.[1][2]

He died in Karagandy Province and was rehabilitated in 1991.[3]

Publications

  • The current economy of Russia (1890 - 1910 years) St Petersburg: Semenova, (1911)
  • Present Situation of the World Economy, (1920)
  • Новые идеи в экономике (New ideas in economics), (1925)
  • Finansovy kapital i proizvoditelny, (1926)

References

  1. Naum Jasny (1972), Soviet economists of the twenties (Soviet Economists of the Twenties ed.), Cambridge, Eng, ISBN 0521083028, OCLC 279124, 0521083028
  2. "MOSCOW TRIAL ENDS". Aberdeen Journal. British Newspaper Archive. 10 March 1931. Retrieved 16 May 2015.
  3. http://lists.memo.ru/d34/f123.htm
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