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Lieu Da-Kuin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
D. K. Lieu
Born1891
Died1962
Academic career
Alma materImperial University
University of Michigan
Academic
advisors
Henry Adams and Fred Taylor

Lieu Da-Kuin or Liu Dajun[1] (simplified Chinese: 刘大钧; traditional Chinese: 劉大鈞; pinyin: Liú Dàjūn; 1891–1962), also alternatively spelled as Dakuin K. Lieu,[2] commonly known in English as D. K. Lieu,[3] was a prominent Chinese economist in the twentieth century. Together with Ma Yinchu, He Lian and Fang Xianting, he is described as one of the "Four Major Economists of the Republic of China".[4]

Biography

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Dakuin K. Lieu, ancestrally from Dantu, Jiangsu, was born in Huai'an, Jiangsu, in 1891.[5] He received private tutoring until 1905, went to Shanghai to attend the Y.M.C.A. School, and graduated from Imperial University (currently Peking University) in 1911.[6]

After graduating from the Imperial University, Lieu went to the United States to study at the University of Michigan, where he studied economics and statistics at the University of Michigan under the tutelage of Henry Carter Adams and Fred M. Taylor, [7] receiving his bachelor's degree in 1915.[8]

Upon his return to China, he taught English for a short time at Qinghua and soon became one of China's leading economic commentators.[9]

He retained links to the University of Michigan through the Michigan Club of Peking of which he was president in 1921.[10]

In 1945, Lieu served as the Chinese representative to the United Nations Statistical Commission, and in 1947, he became the Economic Counselor at the National Government Embassy in the United States. He retired in 1953 and resided in the US, where he died in 1962.[11]

Works

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  • China's Tennant Farming Economy. Pacific Bookstore. 1929.[6]
  • A Report on Chinese Industry. Institute of Economic Statistics. 1937.[6]
  • The Industrialization of Shanghai. Commercial Press. 1940.[6]
  • Industrialization and the Construction of the Chinese Industry. Commercial Press. 1946.[6]

References

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  1. ^ Charles A. Laughlin (2008). The Literature of Leisure and Chinese Modernity. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 105–. ISBN 978-0-8248-6482-8.
  2. ^ Denton & Hockx (1 January 1955). Literary Societies Of Republican China. Lexington Books. pp. 208–. ISBN 978-0-7391-3012-4.
  3. ^ Karl Gerth (2003). China Made: Consumer Culture and the Creation of the Nation. Harvard University Asia Center. p. 346. ISBN 978-0-674-01654-5.
  4. ^ Xu Xiuli; Chen Ye; Xie Fuguo (2016). Cultivation and transcendence. Social Sciences Literature Press. pp. 95–. ISBN 9787509798638.
  5. ^ Hu Shih (2003). The Complete Works of Hu Shih. Anhui Education Publishing House. ISBN 9787533622176.
  6. ^ a b c d e Howard Chiang (2019). The Making of the Human Sciences in China: Historical and Conceptual Foundations. Brill Publishers. pp. 315–. ISBN 978-90-04-39762-0.
  7. ^ Sun Zhijun (2007). A Study of Industrial Economic Thought in the Republic of China. Wuhan University Press. ISBN 9787307059986.
  8. ^ Estrella Trincado; Andrés Lazzarini; Denis Melnik (5 August 2019). Ideas in the History of Economic Development: The Case of Peripheral Countries. Routledge. pp. 120–. ISBN 978-1-00-018647-5.
  9. ^ Trescott, Paul B. (2007). Jingji Xue: The History of the Introduction of Western Economic Ideas into China 185--1950. Hong Kong: Chinese University Press of Hong Kong.
  10. ^ "Alumni". The Michigan Alumnus. 27. 1921.
  11. ^ Dictionary of Modern Chinese Social Scientists. Shuhai Publishing House. 1994. ISBN 9787805501581.