New principles of political economy : of wealth in its relation to population
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Bibliographic Information
New principles of political economy : of wealth in its relation to population
Transaction Publishers, c1991
- Other Title
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Nouveaux principes d'économie politique
Of wealth in its relation to population
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Note
Translation of: Nouveaux principes d'économie politique
Bibliography: p. 649-650
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Although Sismondi was admired for his analytic originality and imagination by Marx, Mill, and Schumpeter, until now there has been no full translation of his major work into English. Richard Hyse's excellent translation permits us to absorb the full flavor and quality of his thought. And as Robert Heilbroner notes in his foreword: "Perhaps even more useful is the commentary that precedes and accompanies the text . . . Hyse takes the reader on a conducted tour as he points out Sismondi's differences from, and criticisms of, Smith and Ricardo and Say, on the one hand, and Marx on the other."In many respects, Sismondi's thought was ahead of its time. A half-century before Walras, he spoke of aggregate "equilibrium." Fifty years before Marx, he devised an algebraic model of economic growth. Ten years before Mill he published an analytical criticism of Say's Law, and one of the earliest uses of marginal utility analysis to explain value. Schumpeter credited him as the father of dynamic analysis in the modern sense. He is also recognized by all as the pioneer of business cycle analysis.Richard Hyse's introduction adds valuable biographical information about Sismondi, and positions his work among eighteenth-century social and economic thinkers. As he notes, Sismondi's life spanned one of the most revolutionary periods in European history; and although Marxist theory clearly owes a debt to Sismondi, his preference was evolution, not revolution. The translation will illuminate the genesis of Marxist ideology and some of the basic causes of its failure. Publication of this translation will be welcomed by economists, social scientists interested in the history of ideas, and those who, in Hyse's words, wish to "follow the mind of a vigorous pamphleteer dealing with the turbulent world of the French Revolution and its lasting aftermath."
Table of Contents
FIRST BOOK Object of Political Economy and Origin of the Science SECOND BOOK Formation and Progress of Wealth THIRD BOOK Of Territorial Wealth FOURTH BOOK Of Commercial Wealth FIFTH BOOK Of Money SIXTH BOOK Of Taxation SEVENTH BOOK Of Population
by "Nielsen BookData"