Economics in the Twentieth Century The History of its International Development 1st edition by Theo Suranyi Unger – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 0415607302 , 978-0415607308
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ISBN 10: 0415607302
ISBN 13: 978-0415607308
Author: Theo Suranyi Unger
This book discusses the history of economic theories, drawing largely from periodical literature, which is often hard to obtain. The book is divided into sections along linguistic lines (German, Romance and English speaking countries).
Economics in the Twentieth Century The History of its International Development 1st Table of contents:
Part One. Philosophical sources of the most recent economic tendencies
1 The baden school of philosophy, the question of method, and the philosophy of values in economics
2 The philosophical bases of “value-less” economics
3 The marburg school of philosophy; cassel and liefmann
4 Comte,spencer, and the theory of economic equilibrium
5 Utilitarian ethicsy the cambridge school and economic liberalism
6 Stammler and the socio-legal theory of economics
7 The renaissance of german idealism, and spann
8 The interpsychological system of tarde
9 9Philosophical Optimism in America and Clark’s School
10 The new american psychology, and economic institutionalism
Part Two. The development in the german-speaking countries
Chapter I: Methods and systems
1 The abatement of the quarrel over method
2 Logical currents
3 The dispute over the value judgments
4 The method of exact comparison
5 Economic philosophy
6 Private economics, business economics and world economics
7 Economics of war
Chapter II: Attempts to create systems
1 The historical school
2 The pure theory of marginal utility
3 Schumpeter’s static and dynamic economics
4 Cassel and his adherents
5 The realistic theories of lexis and adolf weber on the economics of exchange
6 Liefmann’s purely psychological system
7 Organic and teleological thought
8 The socio-legal tendency
9 The systems of the social reformers
10 Outsiders
11 Text books
Chapter III: Value
1 Conflict in the theory of value as between bÖhm-bawerk and wieser
2 Spann’s theory of equal importance
3 Return to the objective theory of value
4 Special attempts at clarification
5 The “moribund” theory of value
Chapter IV: Price
1 The price theory of marginal utility
2 Liefmann’s “purely subjective” explanation of price
3 The “purely objective” solution
4 Attempts at synthesis
5 Spann’s organic and universalistic theory of price
Chapter V: Distribution
1 Marginal utility and the theory of distribution
2 Solutions of the problem of distribution on the basis of the theory of price
3 Social theories of distribution
4 The derivation of rent from the formation of price
5 The generalization of the law of diminishing returns
6 Municipal ground rents
7 The discussion of bÖhm’s agio theory
8 The dynamic explanation of interest
9 Monopoly, abstinence, and productivity theories of interest
10 Further development of ideas of wages theory
11 The explanation of wages on the theory of marginal utility
12 The socialistic theory of wages
13 The dynamic theory of profit
Part Thress. The development in the romance countries
Chapter I: Method
1 1. Absence of Methodological Controversy in the Romance Countries
2 2. The Method of the Lausanne School
3 3. The Non-mathematical Deductive Method
4 4. Logical and Epistemological Attempts
5 The statistical and the historical-inductive viewpoints
6 The influence of sociological tendencies
7 General tendencies in the development of method
8 No innovations in the systematization of economics
Chapter II: Systematic ideas
1 System of the lausanne school
2 Eclectically built abstract-deductive theories
3 The classical liberal group in france
4 Rationalistic systems without theories of value
5 The after-effects of historical relativism
6 Solidaristic social ideas
7 The religious and ethical tendency
8 Socialistic systems
9 Text books
Chapter III: Value
1 The lausanne school and the theory of value
2 Slight success of the pure theory of marginal utility in the romance countries
3 Attempts at a reconciliation between objective and subjective tendencies
4 The conflict over cost of reproduction
5 More recent development of the theory of cost-value
6 Tarde’s theory of value based on cultural philosophy
7 The theory of “economic convenience”
Chapter IV: Price
1 The mathematical theory of price
2 The conflict over the classical law of supply and demand
3 The explanation of price by social ratios of power
4 The “fair” price
Chapter V: Distribution
1 The italian theory of distribution based on the theory of economic equilibrium
2 The modern and the classical theory of distribution in france
3 Ideas of power and of social ethics in the theory of distribution
4 The unification of the laws of returns
5 The generalisation of the theory of rent
6 Consumer’s rent
7 The attitude of the lausanne school to the problem of interest and theories of savings
8 The influence of bÖhm’s agio theory in the romance countries
9 Partial weakening of the theory of interest
10 Socio-ethical wage theories in italy
11 The realistic explanations of wages by levasseur, cornélissen and simiand
12 The marginal principle and socio-ethical viewpoints in the french theory of wages
13 Monopoly theories and eclectic explanations of profits
14 Differential profits
Part Four. The development in the anglo-saxon countries
Chapter I: Method
1 The mathematical procedure
2 Logical attempts
3 The quarrel over psychological principles
4 The realistic current in america
5 Methodological discussions among american economists
6 “Young America”
7 The legal, historical and socio-ethical attitudes
8 The problem of value judgments
9 Business economics, science of management, and the economics of war
Chapter II: Attempts to create systems
1 The cambridge school, and other abstract theoretical systems in england
2 Clark’s school in america
3 Fisher on money and interest
4 Davenport and the point of view of the entrepreneur
5 Fetters development
6 Carver and other theoretical systems in post-war america
7 Realistic and ethically religious systems, and those devoted to social reform
8 Text books
Chapter III: Value
1 The prevalent tendency toward compromise in the anglo-saxon theory of value
2 Developments of the theory of disutility, especially in a social direction
3 Efforts to save the labor theory of value
4 Davenport’s pseudo-objective theory of value
5 Fetter, anderson and the struggle against the marginal utility theory of value
6 Gradual retreat of the whole value theory in anglo-saxon economics
Chapter IV: Price
1 Marshall’s theory of price, and its developments
2 The explanation of price from the point of view of demand. fetter
3 Clark’s theory of price, and the analysis of price boundaries
4 The point of view of costs
5 Monopoly price
6 Normal price and price fluctuations
Chapter V: Distribution
1 The problem of distribution in modern english theory
2 The american theory of marginal productivity
3 Distribution of wealth and the social conflict over prices
4 Development of the austrian theory of imputation
5 The passing of the narrower conception of rent and the problem of returns
6 Newly recognized incomes resembling rent
7 The classical differential rent
8 No new theories of interest in england
9 The idea of productivity and the theory of interest in america
10 The conflict over the concept of capital
11 The reception of bÖhm’s interest theory in america
12 Abstinence, risk, and the residual principle in the american theory of interest
13 The problem of wages in english literature
14 The modem american productivity theory of wages
15 The wage fund theory
16 Moore’s inductive explanation of wages
17 The problem of the wage level
18 The after-effects of the classical idea of productivity in the theory of profits
19 Risk and profit
20 The residual principle and the dynamic element in profits
21 Profits as a monopoly income
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Tags: Theo Suranyi Unger, Twentieth Century, The History, International Development


