Content
Summer 1976, Volume 8, Issue 2
- 252-265 Hume and Viner on the International Adjustment Mechanism
by Charles E. Staley - 266-273 Dupuit and Marginal Utility: Context of the Discovery
by Robert B. Ekelund, Jr. & Robert F. Hebert - 274-277 A Note on Dupuit's Bridges and the Theory of Marginal Cost Pricing
by Alan Abouchar - 278-296 William Bradford Greene and his System of “Mutual Banking”
by Bowman N. Hall - 297-302 The Rehabilitation of the Peasant Proprietor in Nineteenth-Century Economic Thought: A Comment
by David E. Martin
Spring 1976, Volume 8, Issue 1
- 4-6 Dramatis Personae as of 1931
by Don Patinkin - 7-10 Introduction
by Don Patinkin - 11-25 Differences and Similarities: Some General Observations
by Don Patinkin - 26-32 From the Tract to the Treatise
by Don Patinkin - 33-43 The Theoretical Framework of the Treatise: The Fundamental Equations
by Don Patinkin - 44-49 The Theoretical Framework of the Treatise: The Dynamic Analysis, the Quantity Theory, and Wicksell
by Don Patinkin - 50-53 Some Further Reflections on the Fundamental Equations
by Don Patinkin - 54-63 From the Treatise to the General Theory: Criticism and Development
by Don Patinkin - 64-82 From the Treatise to the General Theory: The Development of the Theory of Effective Demand
by Don Patinkin - 83-94 The Theory of Effective Demand in the General Theory
by Don Patinkin - 95-107 The Conceptual Framework of the General Theory: I
by Don Patinkin - 108-119 The Conceptual Framework of the General Theory: II
by Don Patinkin - 120-137 Theory and Policy in Keynes' Monetary Thinking
by Don Patinkin - 138-143 After the General Theory
by Don Patinkin
Winter 1975, Volume 7, Issue 4
- 399-433 Kuhn Versus Lakatos, or Paradigms Versus Research Programmes in the History of Economics
by Mark Blaug - 434-455 Innovations and their Recognition in Social Science
by Joseph Ben-David - 456-481 Problems in the Economist's Conceptualization of Technological Innovation
by Nathan Rosenberg - 482-498 The Development of Communication Theory in Political Science
by Karl W. Deutsch - 499-529 New Causal Theory: An Elite Specialty in Social Science
by Nicholas C. Mullins - 530-548 “Uncertainty” and the Keynesian Revolution
by E. Roy Weintraub - 549-565 On the History of the Mathematical Theory of Games
by Norfleet W. Rives, Jr.
Fall 1975, Volume 7, Issue 3
- 279-292 Frank Knight's Social Economics
by Arthur Schweitzer - 293-298 Schumpeter on Preserving Private Enterprise
by Michael G. Prime & David R. Henderson - 299-311 The “Classical Dichotomy” in Ricardian Economics
by M. A. Akhtar - 312-336 T. E. Cliffe Leslie, Irish Social Reform, and the Origins of the English Historical School of Economics
by Gerard M. Koot - 337-359 John E. Cairnes on the Effects of the Australian Gold Discoveries, 1851–73: An Early Application of the Methodology of Positive Economics
by Michael David Bordo - 360-371 A Quantitative Study of the Breakdown and Resurrection of the Monetary Tradition in Economics
by Galen Burghardt, Jr. - 372-378 A Note on the Division of Labor in Plato and Smith
by Paul J. McNulty - 379-389 Smith and the Greeks: A Reply to Professor McNulty's comments
by Vernard Foley
Summer 1975, Volume 7, Issue 2
- 137-155 Inflation Theories of the SCAP Period
by Martin Bronfenbrenner - 156-173 Thomas Jefferson on Money and Banking: Disciple of David Hume and Forerunner of Some Modern Monetary Views
by Clifton B. Luttrell - 174-192 Mill's Fourth Fundamental Proposition: A Paradox Revisited
by James H. Thompson - 193-208 The Economic Thought of Bernard Mandeville
by Harry Landreth - 209-226 The Methodological Conversion of John Bates Clark
by Joël Jalladeau - 227-251 Textbook Models of American Economic Growth, 1837–1911
by Daniel Horowitz - 252-260 Should Economists Abandon HOPE?
by Bernard A. Corry - 261-269 The Specialization Gap and the Ricardo Effect: Comment on Ferguson
by Gerald P. O'Driscoll, Jr. - 270-272 Communication: On Marxism and Marginalism
by Richard D. Worff - 273-275 Note: The Progress of the Econometric Movement
by James R. Simpson & Lonnie L. Jones - 276-277 Reply
by Tong-eng Wang
Spring 1975, Volume 7, Issue 1
- 1-2 Editor's Introduction
by Craufurd D. W. Goodwin - 3-18 I. Introduction to William A. Salant's “Taxes, the multiplier and the inflationary gap”
by Walter S. Salant - 19-27 II. Taxes, the Multiplier, and the Inflationary Gap
by William A. Salant - 28-31 III. The Balanced Budget Multiplier as the Sum of an Infinite Series
by William A. Salant - 32-35 IV. Introduction to J⊘rgen Gelting's “Some Observations on the Financing of Public Activity”
by Bent Hansen - 36-42 V. Some Observations on the Financing of Public Activity
by J⊘rgen H. Gelting - 43-55 VI. The Balanced-Budget Multiplier: A Case Study in the Sociology and Psychology of Scientific Discovery
by Paul A. Samuelson - 56-74 The Economics of the Just Price
by George W. Wilson - 75-111 Marshall's “Tendency to Socialism”
by Rita McWilliams-Tullberg - 112-122 Teaching the History of Economic Thought: Report of a Symposium at Bristol, 1973
by Pedro Schwartz & S. Hollander - 123-131 The Wicksell Effect, Dewey, and Others: A Note
by Bo Sandelin - 132-136 Adam Smith's Conception of Self-Interest in Economic and Political Affairs
by A. W. Coats
Winter 1974, Volume 6, Issue 4
- 361-380 Pareto on Political Economy
by Vincent J. Tarascio - 381-404 Edgeworth's Contract Curve: Part 2. Two figures in its protohistory: Aristotle and Gossen
by William Jaffé - 405-434 Mountifort Longfield's Supply-and-Demand Theory of Price and its Place in the Development of British Economic Theory
by Laurence S. Moss - 435-453 The Digression on Sismondi: by Torrens or McCulloch?
by William O. Thweatt - 454-462 Historians and economists: perspectives on the development of American economic thought
by Daniel Horowitz - 463-477 Charles Davenant on Financial Administration
by L. J. Hume
Fall 1974, Volume 6, Issue 3
- 246-260 Value in the History of Economic Thought
by Ronald L. Meek - 261-277 The Social and Intellectual Origins of The General Theory
by Elizabeth S. Johnson & Harry G. Johnson - 278-304 Malthus and his Contemporaries
by William D. Grampp - 305-323 The History of Economic Thought as Intellectual History
by Warren J. Samuels - 324-342 The Historical Development of Industrial Organization
by Almarin Phillips & Rodney E. Stevenson - 343-359 Edgeworth's Contract Curve: Part 1. A Propaedeutic Essay in Clarification
by William Jaffé
Summer 1974, Volume 6, Issue 2
- 119-157 The Success of Mill's Principles
by N. B. de Marchi - 158-162 Keynes' Employment Function
by Paul Wells - 162-164 Keynes' Employment Function
by E. Roy Weintraub - 164-170 Keynes' Employment Function
by Axel Leijonhufvud - 171-199 The Meaning of Economic Liberalism in Mid-Nineteenth-Century France
by Dennis Sherman - 200-219 John Locke and the Quantity Theory of Money
by Arthur H. Leigh - 220-242 The Division of Labor in Plato and Smith
by Vernard Foley
Spring 1974, Volume 6, Issue 1
- 1-16 Early Applications of Spectral Methods to Economic Time Series
by Thomas F. Cargill - 17-47 The Rehabilitation of the Peasant Proprietor in Nineteenth-Century Economic Thought
by Clive J. Dewey - 48-75 The Evolution of Marxist Attitudes Toward Marginalist Techniques
by Jacob S. Dreyer - 76-91 Contemporary Profile of Conventional Economists
by Robert V. Eagly - 92-94 An Early Memory of Joseph Schumpeter
by Frank Whitson Fetter - 95-108 The Economic Ideas of Josiah Warren, First American Anarchist
by Bowman N. Hall - 109-113 The Theory of Input Selection and Supply Areas in 1887: Emile Cheysson
by Robert F. Hebert - 114-118 “One Great Tragedy”: A Vignette
by Warren J. Samuels & Andrew Gray
Fall 1973, Volume 5, Issue 2
- 285-316 Empirical Tests of the Quantity Theory of Money in the United States, 1900–1930
by Thomas M. Humphrey - 317-338 Isaac Butt and the Early Development of the Marginal Utility Theory of Imputation
by Laurence S. Moss - 339-358 An Early Modern Hebrew Textbook of Economics
by Ephraim Kleiman - 359-374 Classical Economics and Its Moral Critics
by William D. Grampp - 375-398 War and Human Capital in Western Economic Analysis
by B. F. Kiker & James L. Cochrane - 399-419 Dialectics and the Evolution of Economic Thought
by Siegfried G. Karsten - 420-437 Thorstein Veblen and the New Industrial State
by Charles G. Leathers & John S. Evans - 438-448 A Note on Adam Smith's Version of the Vent for Surplus Model
by Charles E. Staley - 449-484 Hoxie's Economics in Retrospect: The Making and Unmaking of a Veblenian
by Paul J. McNulty - 485-495 The Interpretation of Mercantilist Economics: Some Historiographical Problems; with a Rearguard Response
by A. W. Coats & William R. Allen
Spring 1973, Volume 5, Issue 1
- 1-13 The Specialization Gap: Barton, Ricardo, and Hollander
by C. E. Ferguson - 14-35 The Wage-Fund Controversy: The Second Round
by Scott Gordon - 36-49 Some Intellectual Contributions of the Truman Council of Economic Advisers to Policy-Making
by Walter S. Salant - 50-71 The Corn Laws and Wage Adjustment in a Short-Run Ricardian Model Abstract
by Michael J. Gootzeit - 72-88 From the Treatise to The General Theory: An Exercise in Chronology
by D. E. Moggridge - 89-109 William Graham Sumner's Social Darwinism: A Reconsideration
by Robert C. Bannister, Jr. - 110-120 Population and Mills' Peasant-Proprietor Economy
by Winston C. Bush - 121-150 An Origin of the Tableau Economique
by V. Foley - 151-164 Quantitative Analysis of the Progress of the Econometric Movement: an Exploration
by Tong-eng Wang - 165-198 Alfred Marshall's Attitudes to and Economic Analysis of Trade Unions: A Case of Anomalies in a Competitive System
by Anastasios Petridis - 199-214 Rationalism, Capitalism, and the Entrepreneur: The Views of Veblen and Schumpeter
by L. A. O'Donnell - 215-242 Teaching the History of Economic Thought in the USSR
by Vladimir G. Treml & Dimitri M. Gallik - 243-260 The Emergence of the “New Economics” in Sweden: A Review of a Study by Otto Steiger
by Carl G. Uhr - 261-267 The Backbending Supply Curve of Labor: Comment on Buchanan; with his Reply
by Axel Leijonhufvud - 268-283 Research Possibilities in the History of Political Economy Through a Bibliography of Translations
by Kenneth E. Carpenter & Fritz Redlich
Fall 1972, Volume 4, Issue 2
- 269-280 Was There a Marginal Revolution?
by Mark Blaug - 281-302 The Origins of Marginalism
by Richard S. Howey - 303-324 The Economic and Social Context of the Marginal Revolution of the 1870's
by A. W. Coats - 325-343 Marginalism and the Boundaries of Economic Science
by Donald Winch - 344-363 Mill and Cairnes and the Emergence of Marginalism in England
by N. B. de Marchi - 364-378 W. S. Jevons and the Foundation of Modern Economies
by R. D. Collison Black - 379-405 Léon Walras's Role in the “Marginal Revolution” of the 1870s
by William Jaffé - 406-425 Vilfredo Pareto and Marginalism
by Vincent J. Tarascio - 426-441 To What Extent Was the Austrian School Marginalist?
by Erich Streissler - 442-468 The “Marginal Revolution” Decline and Fall of English Political Economy
by T. W. Hutchison - 469-498 The Marginal Revolution and Concern with Economic Growth
by Joseph J. Spengler - 499-511 Marginalism and Marxism
by Ronald L. Meek - 512-532 The Spread of Marginalism in Italy, 1871–1890
by Piero Barucci - 533-550 Marginalism in Japan
by Tamotsu Matsuura - 551-570 Marginalism Moves to the New World
by Craufurd D. W. Goodwin - 571-586 The Adoption of the Marginal Utility Theory
by George J. Stigler - 587-602 Marginalism: The Harvest
by G. L. S. Shackle - 603-624 Retrospect and Prospect
by A. W. Coats
Spring 1972, Volume 4, Issue 1
- 1-61 Alfred Marshall: The Years 1877 to 1885
by John K. Whitaker - 62-88 Sismondi: A Neglected Pioneer
by Thomas Sowell - 89-112 Bimetallism: Theory and Controversy in Perspective
by Chau-nan Chen - 113-126 Is Marxian Growth Crisis-Ridden?
by Shlomo Maital - 127-139 The Paradox of Value: A Suggested Interpretation
by Matthew A. Stephenson - 140-162 The Teaching of Business Cycles in 1905–1906: Insight Into the Development of Macroeconomic Theory
by Warren J. Samuels - 163-175 Philosophical Anticipations of Laissez-Faire
by M. L. Myers - 163-175 Philosophical Anticipations of Laissez-Faire
by M. L. Myers - 176-206 The Implications of the Theory of Moral Sentiments for Adam Smith's Economic Thought
by Ralph Anspach - 207-231 Herbert Spencer's Theory of Welfare and Public Policy
by William L. Miller - 232-251 The Idea of Planning in Italian Economic Thought
by Piero Barucci
Fall 1971, Volume 3, Issue 2
- 225-237 After Samuelson, Who Needs Adam Smith?
by Kenneth E. Boulding - 238-264 Some Implications of Adam Smith's Analysis of Investment Priorities
by Samuel Hollander - 265-277 Smith's Travels on the Ship of State
by George J. Stigler - 278-297 An Interpretation of Walras' Theory of Capital as a Model of Economic Growth
by William David Montgomery - 298-334 Marx on Value, Capital, and Exploitation
by Arun Bose - 335-352 The Day Karl Marx Grew Up
by Murray Wolfson - 353-372 The Wicksell Effects in Wicksell and in Modern Capital Theory
by C. E. Ferguson & Donald L. Hooks - 373-382 Chapman on the Remuneration of Employers
by Ralph W. Pfouts - 383-390 The Backbending Supply Curve of Labor: An Example of Doctrinal Retrogression?
by James M. Buchanan - 391-397 On the Structure of Scientific Revolutions in Economics
by Leonard Kunin & F. Stirton Weaver - 398-414 The President, the Constitution, and the Economist in Economic Stabilization
by Neil H. Jacoby - 415-418 Two Letters from James Mill to Jean-Baptiste Say
by Arnold Heertje - 419-431 Some Recent Developments in the History of Economic Thought in the United States
by Vincent J. Tarascio
Spring 1971, Volume 3, Issue 1
- 1-8 Some Personal Reminiscences of Alfred Marshall
by Claude W. Guillebaud - 9-27 Smith, Turgot, and the “Four Stages” Theory
by Ronald L. Meek - 28-55 Marxist Models of Cyclical Growth
by Howard J. Sherman - 56-91 Davidson's Theory of “Objective Value”: A “Transformation” Problem
by Carl G. Uhr - 92-104 Alberuni: Eleventh-Century Iranian Malthusian?
by Joseph J. Spengler - 105-135 The Development of Ricardo's Position on Machinery
by Samuel Hollander - 136-151 The “Structure of Revolutions” in Economic Thought
by Martin Bronfenbrenner - 152-169 Labor as Scarcity in Marx's Value Theory: An Alternative Interpretation
by Alexander Bajt - 170-189 Frederic Harrison and the “Positivist” Attack on Orthodox Political Economy
by Paul Adelman - 190-197 Cournot's Demand Theory: A Reassessment
by Clifford L. Fry & Robert B. Ekelund, Jr. - 198-207 Richard Jones: A Case Study in Methodology
by William L. Miller - 208-223 Monopoly Price Discrimination in 1850: Dionysius Lardner
by Donald L. Hooks
Fall 1970, Volume 2, Issue 2
- 205-224 The Vicissitudes of Marxian Economics
by M. Bronfenbrenner - 225-245 Ricardo's Long-Run Equilibrium
by Hans Brems - 246-262 M. I. Tugan-Baranovsky (1865—1919)
by Alec Nove - 263-283 Émile de Laveleye (1822–1892)
by Paul Lambert - 284-315 The Historical Development of National-Income Accounts
by John W. Kendrick - 344-380 Lauderdale's Early Pamphlets on Public Finance (1796–1799)
by Herbert Fergus Thomson, Jr. - 381-397 Modern Defenders of Mercantilist Theory
by William R. Allen - 398-418 Austro-Marxism vs. Austro-Marginalism
by Emil Kauder - 419-431 The First Mathematical Ricardian Model
by James L. Cochrane - 432-440 John Rae and Liquidity Preference
by Nathan Edmonson
Spring 1970, Volume 2, Issue 1
- 1-65 Alfred Marshall's Aims and Methods Illustrated From His Treatment of Distribution
by H. M. Robertson - 66-96 Typological Method in Economics: Max Weber's Contribution
by Arthur Schweitzer - 97-117 Concepts of Change and the Role of Predictability in Economics
by Alfred F. Chalk - 118-132 Mitchell's Work on Civil War Inflation in His Development as an Economist
by Abraham Hirsch - 133-151 Notes on the International Transmission of Economic Ideas
by Joseph J. Spengler - 152-176 Individual, Group, or Government? Smith, Mill, and Sidgwick
by Frank Petrella - 177-196 A Reappraisal of Turgot's Theory of Value, Exchange, and Price Determination
by P. D. Groenewegen - 197-198 An Error in the First Printings of Keynes's General Theory
by A. J. Hagger - 199-204 The Earliest English Attempt at Theoretical Training for Business: A Bibliographical Note
by Fritz Redlich
Fall 1969, Volume 1, Issue 2
- 217-230 Does Economics Have a Useful Past?
by George J. Stigler - 231-255 Economists and Economic Policy in Britain After 1870
by T. W. Hutchison - 256-278 The Impact of Positivism on Economic Thought
by Ben B. Seligman - 279-305 La Pensée Economique en France sur l'idée d'abondance et de besoin
by Alfred Sauvy - 306-335 Malthus and the Post-Napoleonic Depression
by S. Hollander - 336-358 Gerrard de Malynes and Mercantile Economics
by Lynn Muchmore - 359-369 The “Last Hour” of Senior and Marx
by Orace Johnson - 370-387 Criticism of Ricardian Views on Value and Distribution in the British Periodicals, 1820–1850
by Barry Gordon - 388-394 Henry Simons, the Radical: Some Documentary Evidence
by J. Ronnie Davis - 395-400 A Neglected Early Statement of the Paradox of Thrift
by Robert T. Nash & William P. Gramm
Spring 1969, Volume 1, Issue 1
- 1-4 Avant-Propos
by Craufurd D. Goodwin & Joseph J. Spengler & Robert S. Smith - 9-18 Research Priorities in the History of Economics
by A. W. Coats - 19-43 A. N. Isnard, Progenitor of the Walrasian General Equilibrium Model
by William Jaffé - 44-66 Aristotle's Mathematical Analysis of Exchange
by S. Todd Lowry - 67-84 The Rise and Decline of Ricardian Economics
by Frank W. Fetter - 85-100 James Mill and the Theory of Economic Policy in India
by William J. Barber