Economic Heresies: Some Old-fashioned Questions in Economic Theory

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Macmillan, 1971 - Business & Economics - 150 pages
What has happened to economic theory? Why, more than a generation since the Keynesian liberation, is the "old theology" closing in again? One of the world's great economists, herself a leading Keynesian during the 1930s, here attacks with her customary wit and lucidity the new (Keynesian) economic orthodoxy, which, she argues convincingly, is nothing but old neo-classical orthodoxy supported by Keynesian policies designed to keep investment at full-employment levels. But the "old-fashioned questions" remain, and the new orthodoxy is now coming to a crisis, as one of its cardinal assumptions - the belief that the form of investment is controlled by the principle of maximizing social welfare - is being discredited by growing public awareness of the prevalence of poverty (even hunger), urban decay, and polluted environments in the wealthiest nations. What is needed, and what Professor Robinson's book provides, is a new look at the theory of value, distribution and accumulation. Applying analyses derived from von Neumann, Sraffa, and Kalecki, her volume proposes a fundamental reorientation of economic theory designed to clear away the fog of orthodox obfuscation and enable us to see the problems of modern life as they are.

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Contents

STATIONARY STATES
3
THE SHORT PERIOD
16
INTEREST AND PROFITS
25
Copyright

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