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・ Jean Fleury
・ Jean Florimond Boudon de Saint-Amans
・ Jean Flory
・ Jean Focas
・ Jean Follain
・ Jean Fombertaux
・ Jean Fontenay
・ Jean Fontenoy
・ Jean Fonteyne
・ Jean Forbes-Robertson
・ Jean Forest
・ Jean Forestier
・ Jean Fortier
・ Jean Fouchard
・ Jean Fouquet
Jean Fourastié
・ Jean Fournel
・ Jean Fournet
・ Jean Fournier
・ Jean Fourton
・ Jean Fox O'Barr
・ Jean Foyer
・ Jean Frances Howard
・ Jean Francisque Coignet
・ Jean Franco
・ Jean Frangipani
・ Jean Franko
・ Jean Françaix
・ Jean François Aimé Dejean
・ Jean François Aimé Théophile Philippe Gaudin


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Jean Fourastié : ウィキペディア英語版
Jean Fourastié


Jean Fourastié ((:ʒɑ̃ fuʁastje); 1 April 1907 in Saint-Benin-d'Azy, Nièvre - 25 July 1990 in Douelle, Lot) was a French economist, notable for having coined the expression ''Trente Glorieuses'' ("the glorious thirty ()") to describe the period of prosperity that France experienced from the end of World War II until the 1973 oil crisis (1945-1973).
==Biography==
Fourastié received his elementary and secondary education at the private Catholic College of Juilly from 1914 to 1925. In 1930, he graduated from the prestigious École Centrale Paris, and in 1933 received a degree from the École Libre des Sciences Politiques. In 1936, he received a doctor of law degree. Following his studies, he entered the civil service as a tax official until 1951.
In 1941, he headed the insurance program at Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers (CNAM).
Following the war, he began his career as an economic advisor, with a strong liberal, pro-European stance, while at the same time becoming one of the most recognized academic experts on industrial society.

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