'David Bensusan-Butt' (born
Colchester 24 July 1914, died
London 25 March 1994) was an
English economist who spent much of his career in
Australia.
Background and education
A nephew of the
French Impressionist painter Camille Pissarro, and the son of the first woman doctor to work in
Essex, Bensusan-Butt was educated at
Gresham's School,
Holt, and
King's College, Cambridge, where he was a student of
John Maynard Keynes and indexed Keynes's
magnum opus, the ''
General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money''.
Career
After a short period working for
The Economist, Bensusan-Butt joined the
civil service in 1938. Early in the
Second World War he became private secretary to
Frederick Lindemann, 1st Viscount Cherwell, then worked for
Winston Churchill in the Prime Minister's office. He later joined the
Royal Navy, serving on the minelayer H.M.S. Cyclone.
Following the war, Butt moved to the Economic Section of the
Cabinet Office and later the
Treasury. In 1949-1950 he was seconded to the
Australian Prime Minister's Department, and he spent two periods of one year at
Nuffield College, Oxford as a research fellow, in 1953-1954 and 1958-1959.
In 1962, he became a Professorial Fellow in the Research School of Pacific Studies of the
Australian National University, remaining there for fifteen years. In 1975-1976 he was the most influential member of the Asprey Committee on tax reform, recommending a dramatic change from a complicated system of income taxes to a broad-based consumption tax.
In 1976, he retired to
London, settling in part of the
17th century house at
Stamford Brook of his uncle by marriage
Camille Pissarro.
References
★ ''David Bensusan-Butt, 1914-1994'' by H. W. Arndt & R. M. Sundrum in ''The Economic Journal'' (vol. 105, no. 430, May, 1995, pp. 669-675)
★
Obituary at
The Independent, 5 April 1994