In clear, nontechnical language, this introductory textbook
describes the history of economic thought, focusing on the
development of economic theory from Adam Smith's "Wealth of
Nations" to the late twentieth century.
The text concentrates on the most important figures in the
history of economics, from Smith, Thomas Robert Malthus, David
Ricardo, John Stuart Mill, and Karl Marx in the classical period to
John Maynard Keynes and the leading economists of the postwar era,
such as John Hicks, Milton Friedman, and Paul Samuelson. It
describes the development of theories concerning prices and
markets, money and the price level, population and capital
accumulation, and the choice between socialism and the market
economy. The book examines how important economists have reflected
on the sometimes conflicting goals of efficient resource use and
socially acceptable income distribution. It also provides sketches
of the lives and times of the major economists.
"Economics Evolving" repeatedly shows how apparently simple
ideas that are now taken for granted were at one time at the
cutting edge of economics research. For example, the demand curve
that today's students probably get to know during their first
economics lecture was originally drawn by one of the most
innovative theorists in the history of the subject. The book
demonstrates not only how the study of economics has progressed
over the course of its history, but also that it is still a
developing science.
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