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E-raamat: Competing Schools of Economic Thought

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  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Jun-2010
  • Kirjastus: Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783540926931
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Jun-2010
  • Kirjastus: Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783540926931

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1. 1 Introduction This book was born out of our reaction to the way in which the usual texts cover the subject of the history of economic thought. In most of these texts, there is a tendency to emphasize the similarities and differences between all the important economists and form a repository of encyclopedic knowledge where one can study the seemingly important economic ideas. In this book, we argue that it is much more fruitful to focus on the essential ideas of each and every school of economic thought and relate them to present-day problems, than to engage into a sterile discussion of the ideas and the lives of the great economists of the past. Thus, although this book deals with the history of economic thought, it does not necessarily follow a historic (in the sense of the order of presentation) approach, but rather a logical one, that is to say it deals with the social conditions associated with the emergence of a school of economic thought, its evolution, and its contemporary in uence. One cannot write a book on the history of economic thought without writing separate chapters on the major economists of the past, that is, Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Karl Marx, and J. M. Keynes. Of course these economists formed schools of economic thought, that is, the classical and the Keynesian.
1 Introduction
1(4)
1.1 Introduction
1(4)
2 The Origins of Economic Theory
5(16)
2.1 Introduction
5(2)
2.2 Mercantilism
7(2)
2.3 Physiocracy
9(8)
2.3.1 Fundamental Physiocratic Principles
10(1)
2.3.2 The Tableau Economique
11(2)
2.3.3 The Tableau Economique as an Input-Output Model
13(3)
2.3.4 The Single-Tax Scheme
16(1)
2.4 Summary and Conclusions
17(4)
3 Adam Smith's Wealth of Nations
21(36)
3.1 Introduction
21(1)
3.2 The Theory of Moral Sentiments
21(2)
3.3 The Market Mechanism
23(2)
3.4 The Theory of Value
25(4)
3.5 The Making of Economic Science
29(4)
3.6 Smith's Model of Economic Growth
33(4)
3.7 The Falling Rate of Profit and the Stationary Economy
37(2)
3.8 The Stationary Economy
39(9)
3.8.1 Productive and Non-Productive Labour
42(3)
3.8.2 General Statements on Taxation
45(3)
3.9 On Public Debt
48(1)
3.10 Summary and Conclusions
49(5)
Appendix: The Labour Commanded Theory of Value
54(3)
4 David Ricardo's Principles of Political Economy
57(28)
4.1 Introduction
57(1)
4.2 The Theory of (Exchange) Value
58(7)
4.2.1 Modifications due to Unequal Capital-Labour Ratios
61(1)
4.2.2 Modifications due to Changes in Distribution
62(1)
4.2.3 Modifications due to Unequal Turnover Times
63(2)
4.3 The Rate of Profit in the Long Run and the Stationary State
65(4)
4.4 The Principle of Comparative Advantage
69(3)
4.5 On the Question of Machinery
72(3)
4.6 Ricardo's Theory of Taxation
75(3)
4.7 Ricardo on Public Debt
78(3)
4.8 Concluding Remarks
81(4)
5 Karl Marx's Das Kapital
85(48)
5.1 Introduction
85(2)
5.2 Commodity Production and Value
87(1)
5.3 Concrete and Abstract Labour
88(1)
5.4 Socially Necessary Labour Time
89(2)
5.5 The Law of Value in Marx
91(1)
5.6 Money and Price
92(1)
5.7 Surplus Value and Profit
93(2)
5.8 Marx's Theory of Money
95(6)
5.8.1 Convertible Paper Money
98(2)
5.8.2 Non-convertible Paper Money
100(1)
5.9 The Transformation Problem
101(10)
5.9.1 Marx's Solution
103(3)
5.9.2 The Critique of von Bortkiewicz
106(1)
5.9.3 Shaikh's Solution
107(5)
5.10 Marx on Competition
111(5)
5.10.1 Competition Between Industries
112(2)
5.10.2 Competition Within Industries
114(1)
5.10.3 Regulating Capitals
115(1)
5.11 The Falling Tendency of the Rate of Profit
116(2)
5.12 General Rate of Profit and Economic Crisis
118(2)
5.13 Summary and Conclusions
120(7)
Appendix
127(6)
A1 The Mathematics of the Falling Rate of Profit
127(1)
A2 The Incremental Rate of Profit and its Components
128(5)
6 The Structure of Classical Theory
133(24)
6.1 Introduction
133(2)
6.2 The Long Period Method of Analysis
135(6)
6.2.1 Given Output
138(1)
6.2.2 Given Technique
138(1)
6.2.3 Given Real Wage
139(2)
6.3 The Determination of the Level of Output, or Say's Law of Markets
141(1)
6.4 The Linear Model of Production
142(1)
6.5 The Malthus-Ricardo Controversy on Say's Law
143(4)
6.6 Summary and Conclusions
147(3)
Appendix A
150(7)
A.1 The Input-Ouput Analysis
150(2)
A.1.1 Price Determination
152(1)
A.1.2 A Numerical Example
152(1)
A.1.3 The Marxian Theory of Value and Direct Prices
153(1)
A.1.4 Prices of Production
154(3)
7 The Structure of the Neoclassical Theory
157(30)
7.1 Introduction
157(1)
7.2 The Silent Marginal Revolution
158(4)
7.3 Salient Features of the Neoclassical Theory
162(2)
7.4 The Model of Pure Exchange Economy
164(11)
7.4.1 A Formal Presentation
172(1)
7.4.2 Walras Law
173(2)
7.5 From Pure Exchange to Production
175(6)
7.6 Summary and Conclusions
181(6)
8 Theory of Capital and Cambridge Controversies
187(26)
8.1 Introduction
187(1)
8.2 Production with Produced Means of Production
188(2)
8.3 Production with Capital and the First Neoclassical Economists
190(6)
8.4 Samuelson's Surrogate Production Function
196(5)
8.5 From the One-Commodity World to the Real Economy
201(5)
8.6 Wicksell Effects
206(1)
8.7 Summary-Conclusions
207(6)
9 Between Competition and Monopoly
213(30)
9.1 Introduction
213(1)
9.2 Neoclassical Theory and Perfect Competition
214(3)
9.3 Economies of Scale
217(2)
9.4 Cost Curves
219(3)
9.5 Sraffa's Critique of the Marshallian Theory of the Firm
222(3)
9.6 Model Differentiation: Robinson Vs. Chamberlin
225(8)
9.7 The Rise and Fall of a Revolution
233(4)
9.8 Summary and Conclusions
237(4)
Appendix A
241(1)
Full Cost Pricing of Hall and Hitch
241(2)
10 Keynes's General Theory
243(28)
10.1 Introduction
244(1)
10.2 The Principle of Effective Demand
245(2)
10.3 The Income Determination Model
247(4)
10.4 The Marginal Efficiency of Capital
251(5)
10.4.1 The Falling MEC
252(4)
10.5 The Liquidity Preference Theory
256(7)
10.5.1 Money Rate of Interest and Returns on Assets
260(3)
10.6 The Effects of Wage Reduction
263(1)
10.7 Keynes on Economic Policy
264(2)
10.8 Summary and Conclusions
266(5)
11 The Neoclassical Synthesis
271(16)
11.1 Introduction
271(1)
11.2 Hicks's Analysis of IS-LM
272(4)
11.3 Hicks and Keynes
276(3)
11.4 Modigliani's Synthesis
279(3)
11.5 Summary and Conclusions
282(5)
12 Disequilibrium Macroeconomics: From its Brief Ascent to the Rapid Decline
287(14)
12.1 Introduction
287(1)
12.2 Walrasian Vs. Keynesian Models
288(1)
12.3 Effective Demand and Notional Demand
289(3)
12.4 The Microeconomic Foundations of Disequilibrium Macroeconomics
292(3)
12.5 The Effectiveness of Economic Policy
295(2)
12.5.1 The Critique of Richard Kahn
297(1)
12.6 Summary and Conclusions
297(4)
13 The Rise and Fall of Monetarism
301(24)
13.1 Introduction
301(1)
13.2 The Phillips Curve
302(5)
13.2.1 Short-Run and Long-Run Phillips Curve
303(3)
13.2.2 Expectations-Augmented Phillips Curve
306(1)
13.3 Quantity Theory of Money and Monetarism
307(6)
13.3.1 Friedman's Demand for Money
311(2)
13.4 The Monetarist Approach to the Balance of Payments
313(2)
13.5 Economic Policy Conclusions
315(2)
13.6 Keynesian Responses
317(3)
13.7 Summary and Conclusions
320(5)
14 New Classical Macroeconomics
325(18)
14.1 Introduction
325(2)
14.2 The Rational Expectations Hypothesis
327(2)
14.3 Continuous Market Clearing
329(1)
14.4 The Lucas Supply Curve
330(2)
14.5 The New Classical Economics and the Business Cycle
332(2)
14.6 The Ineffectiveness of Government Intervention
334(1)
14.7 Barro's Ricardian Equivalence Theorem
335(2)
14.8 The Lucas Critique
337(1)
14.9 Concluding Remarks
338(5)
15 The Real Business Cycles Approach
343(20)
15.1 Introduction
343(1)
15.2 Salient Features of the RBC Approach
344(2)
15.3 A Short Historical Excursion
346(3)
15.4 Economic Growth and Cycles
349(2)
15.5 Shocks in Technology
351(2)
15.6 Simulation Models
353(1)
15.7 Economic Policy Implications
354(3)
15.8 Summary and Concluding Remarks
357(6)
16 The Return of (New) Keynesian Economics
363(20)
16.1 Introduction
363(1)
16.2 Nominal Rigidities
364(3)
16.3 Real Rigidities
367(5)
16.3.1 Models of Implicit Contracts
369(1)
16.3.2 The Efficient Wage Hypothesis
370(1)
16.3.3 The Insider-Outsider Hypothesis
371(1)
16.4 Economic Fluctuations
372(3)
16.4.1 Fluctuations Caused by Nominal Rigidities
372(2)
16.4.2 Fluctuations Caused by Uncertainty
374(1)
16.5 New Consensus Macroeconomics
375(3)
16.6 Policy Implications
378(1)
16.7 Summary and Conclusions
379(4)
17 Economic Theory in Historical Perspective
383(12)
17.1 Introduction
383(1)
17.2 Core Characteristics of Competing Economic Theories
384(8)
17.3 Elements for a New Direction
392(3)
References 395(18)
Index 413