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Branko Horvat
In The Theory of Value, Capital and Interest, Branko Horvat puts forward a new economic theory, relevant to real-world economics. This radical and innovative book deals with the economy as a system which includes producers, consumers and a social regulating agency, rather than simply as an aggregate of individuals. Beginning with an essay on economic methodology which analyses the underpinnings of neoclassical economics, the author presents a two-sector canonical model which is used to establish equilibrium prices and quantities in a stationary and growing economy. This thesis distinguishes two sources of growthexpansion of the labour force and technological progress - and also discusses criteria for investment. Later chapters extend Professor Horvat's model to include joint production and rent, and present a general case which allows for many consumer and producer goods. By introducing a new economic paradigm - and in so doing offering a solution to the long-standing labour theory of value controversy - this book makes a series of important innovations and will be welcomed as a major contribution by neo-Ricardians, Marxists, post-Keynesians and critical neoclassicals.
| Publisher | Edward Elgar |
|---|---|
| Pages | 281 |
| Search language | english |
| ISBN_10 | 1-858-98055-0 primary |
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