Alfred Sauvy



         



Alfred Sauvy by Erling Mandelmann
© http://www.erlingmandelmann.ch

Alfred Sauvy (1898-1990) was a demographer, anthropologist and historian of the French economy. Sauvy coined the term Third World (Tiers Monde) in reference to the underdeveloped countries in an article published in the French magazine Sieyes?s famous sentence about the Third State during the French Revolution. Sauvy assimilated then the capitalist First world to the nobility and the communist Second World to the clergy.

Biography

Born in Villeneuve de la Raho (Eastern Pyrenean) and educated at the École Polytechnique, Alfred Sauvy worked at the Statistique Générale of France until 1937. In 1938, Paul Reynaud called him to deal with economical issues until the war arrived in 1939. During the occupation Sauvy participated in the edition of the ?Bulletin Rouge-Brique?, a non-censored pamphlet. After the war, De Gaulle named him as the General Secretary to the Family and the Population but Sauvy decided to turn itself towards demography. He became director of the INED (National Institute of Demographic Studies) and simultaneously represented France to the commission of Statistics and Population of the United Nations. He wrote for ?Le Monde? until his decease in October 1990.

His work


Reference

Martínez Coll, Juan Carlos (2001): Grandes Economistas, http://www.eumed.net/cursecon/economistas/, February 22, 2004





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