Edgard Allix is a French economist born in Versailles on December 16, 1874 and died in Paris 16th on June 22, 1938[1],[2].
Biography
Born in Versailles in 1874 and died in Paris in 1938, Edgard Allix was a professor at the faculty of Dijon (1901), then at that of Caen from 1902 to 1912. He then became a professor at the Paris Law Faculty. During the First World War, he served as a lieutenant in the general staff, he became a professor at the School of Advanced Commercial Studies (1922) and distinguished himself as a diplomat and specialist in international finance, particularly in the question of reparations for the First World War: Young and Dawes plans.
He was promoted to officer of the Legion of Honor in 1924[3].
He was elected to the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences on February 8, 1936. He succeeds Auguste Deschamps[4].
In 1937 he created the International Institute of Public Finance (IIFP), which became the International Institute of Public Finance (IIPF)[5].
He is buried in Granville.
Works
Alongside numerous academic articles he published:
Elementary treatise on science and financial legislation (1907)
Income tax (1928)
Contributions i