Education
She studied at Newnham College as an undergraduate in the 1920s.
She studied at Newnham College as an undergraduate in the 1920s.
And in 1930 received a Commonwealth Fund fellowship to go to the United States. She spent two years at Stanford and Cornell. On her return she worked at Agricultural Economic Research Institute in Oxford where she remained until 1939. She then returned to Newnham College, as a lecturer and Director of Studies in Economics.
Shortly after her return she was called to serve in London at the Ministry of Food and then at the Board of Trade.
At the end of the war she returned again to Cambridge to teach in economics a role she held until 1972. She was elected to be Principal of Newnham College in 1954, Chair of the Ministry of Agriculture Committee for the Provincial Agricultural Advisory Service in 1962 and was awarded a Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1969.
After her retirement, from 1973 to 1987, she worked as a Labour Councillor for Newnham Ward on Cambridge City Councilchairing the Finance Committee and being active on the Development Control Sub-committee. Within economics in addition to her own published output (see below) Phyllis Deane argues that her major contribution may well have been her revelation of the fatal flaw (or from another perspective, awkward anomaly) in neoclassical capital theory.