Classical economics and modern theory : studies in long-period analysis Heinz Dieter Kurz, Neri Salvadori.
Tipo de material: TextoDetalles de publicación: London : Routledge, 2003Edición: 1rst edDescripción: 341 pISBN:- 0-415-36952-5
- 330.153
Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Signatura topográfica | URL | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras | |
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Libro | Biblioteca Manuel Belgrano | 330.153 K 48894 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) | Enlace al recurso | Disponible | 48894 |
Incluye bibliografía.
1. Introduction -- Part 1: Classical theory and its interpretations -- 2. Understanding 'classical' economics: a reply to Mark Blaug -- 3. 'Classical' roots of input-output analysis: a short account of its long prehistory -- 4. Friedrich Benedikt Wilhelm Hermann on capital and profits -- 5. Burgstaller on classical and neoclassical theory -- Part 2: Growth theory and classical tradition -- 6. Theories of 'endogenous' growth in historical perspective -- 7. What could the 'new' growth theory teach Smith or Ricardo? -- 8 A linear multisector model of 'endogenous' growth and the problem of capital -- 9. A linear multisector model of 'endogenous' growth: a post-script -- Part 3: On Sraffa's contribution -- 10. Sraffa and the mathematicians: Frank Ramsey and Alister Watson -- 11. Sraffa and von Neumann -- Part 4: Exhaustible resources and the long-period method -- 13. Classical economics and the problem of exhaustible resources -- 14. Economics dynamics in a simple model with exhaustible resources and a given real wate rate -- Part 5: Criticism of neoclassical theory -- 15. Reverse capital deepening and the numéraire: a note -- 16. Reswitching-simplifying a famous example -- 17. Franklin Fisher on aggregation -- 18. Wicksell and the problem of the 'missing' equation.
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