Bibliographic Information

Neoclassical international economics : an historical survey

Leonard Gomes

Macmillan, 1990

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Note

Bibliography: p. 264-265

Description and Table of Contents

Description

By the same author as "Foreign Trade and the National Economy: Mercantilist and Classical Perspectives", which offered a historical perspective on the development of mercantilist and classical trade theory and policy, this work was conceived as its sequel. It studies the evolution of economics from the beginning of the neoclassical period (1870-1890), when economics became an academic subject, to contemporary developments.

Table of Contents

  • Part 1 The classical legacy. Part 2 Early neoclassical contributions: Cournot
  • Mangoldt. Part 3 Trade theory in the age of Marshall: Marshall
  • Edgeworth
  • Pigou and Bickerdike
  • Barone, Auspitz and Lieben, Pareto. Part 4 The tariff reform debate (1903). Part 5 Two arguments for protection: Schuller and idle resource effect
  • Manoilescu and wage differentials. Part 6 Graham's critique. Part 7 Trade and general equilibrium: the approach to general equilibrium
  • the Heckscher-Ohlin-Samuelson model
  • recent developments in trade theory and policy. Part 8 Balance of payments theory: the international adjustment mechanism and the transfer problem
  • the purchasing-power parity theory (PPP)
  • Keynes and international monetary arrangements
  • Keynesian and contemporary balance of payments models.

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