Theorists of economic growth from David Hume to the present : with a perspective on the next century
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Theorists of economic growth from David Hume to the present : with a perspective on the next century
Oxford University Press, 1990
- : pbk.
Available at 84 libraries
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  Iwate
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  Toyama
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  Nagano
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  Kyoto
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  Tokushima
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  Fukuoka
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Note
Bibliography: p. [571]-682
Includes indexes
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
ISBN 9780195058376
Description
A distinguished economist surveys important theorists from Hume and Adam Smith to the present and explores how they chose to deal - or not to deal - with the variables and problems posed by the dynamics of economic growth. Each of the three historical sections is organized differently according to the particular way in which growth theory was treated in each period. A concluding section deals with the unsolved problems of growth theory and the economic agenda facing the world into the next century.
Table of Contents
- Part 1: Six classical economists: David Hume to Karl Marx
- David Hume and Adam Smith
- T.R.Malthus and David Ricardo
- Growth theory moves to the periphery, 1870-1939
- The setting
- Alfred Marshall (1842-1924)
- Population and the working force
- Investment and technology, Part 2: The emergence of national income accounting
- Investment and technology, Part 3: Growth theory
- J.S.Mill and Karl Marx
- Part 3: Growth analysis post-1945: A three ring circus: Introduction
- Formal models of economic growth: Rise and subsidence
- Statistical analyses of the structure of growth: from morphology to policy - almost
- Development economics
- Business cycles and growth: from Juglar to Keynes
- Business cycles and growth: Keynes and after
- Relative prices
- Stages of and limits to growth
- Part 4: Problems and prospects
- Two concluding questions
- What don't we know about economic growth
- Where are we? An agenda in mid-passage.
- Volume
-
: pbk. ISBN 9780195080438
Description
This book is the summation of a life's work by a distinguished economist. In it he surveys the important theorists in economics from David Hume and Adam Smith to the present, and explores how they chose to deal or not to deal with the variables and problems posed by the dynamics of economic growth. Each of the three historical sections is organized differently according to the particular way in which growth theory was treated in each period. A concluding section
deals with what the author considers the unsolved problems of growth theory and the economic agenda facing the world into the next century. It is Rostow's intention that this work stand alongside Schumpeter's "The History of Economic Analysis" as a landmark work in the history of economic
theory.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Part I: Six classical economists: David Hume to Karl Marx
- David Hume and Adam Smith
- T. R. Malthus and David Ricardo
- Growth theory moves to the periphery, 1870-1939
- The setting
- Alfred Marshall (1842-1924)
- Population and the working force
- Investment and technology, Part One: The emergence of national income accounting
- Investment and technology, Part Two: Growth theory
- J. S. Mill and Karl Marx
- Part Three: Growth analysis post-1945: A three ring circus: Introduction
- Formal models of economic growth: Rise and subsidence
- Statistical analyses of the structure of growth: from morphology to policy - almost
- Development economics
- Business cycles and growth: from Juglar to Keynes
- Business cycles and growth: Keynes and after
- Relative prices
- Stages of and limits to growth
- Part Four: Problems and prospects
- Two concluding questions
- What don't we know about economic growth
- Where are we? An agenda in mid-passage
- Appendix: Models of economic growth
- Rostow's theory of economic growth
- The A. Smith model revisited
- A rich country-poor country model
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