The Elgar Companion to Hayekian Economics provides an in-depth
treatment of Friedrich August von Hayek's economic thought from his
technical economics of the 1920s and 1930s to his broader views on
the spontaneous order of a free society. Taken together, the
chapters show evidence both of continuity of thought and of
significant changes in focus. Providing a thorough and balanced
account of Hayek's work, the authors examine his wide-ranging
contribution to thought in the areas of business cycles, socialism
and trade unions and the socialist calculation debate, as well as
social justice, spontaneous order, globalization and free trade.
The authors provide enlightening comparisons between Hayek's views
and those of Ludwig von Mises, Ludwig M. Lachmann, Milton Friedman
and John Maynard Keynes. Scholars working in the classical liberal
tradition as well as academic economists and political scientists
will find this in-depth account to be an invaluable resource.
Contributors: R.E. Backhouse, C.W. Baird, P.J. Boettke, E.
Colombato, C.J. Coyne, R.M. Ebeling, R.W. Garrison, S.G. Horwitz,
P.T. Leeson, P. Lewin, P. Lewis, R. Nef, D. O'Brien, M. Pennington,
M. Ricketts, C. Smith, G.R. Steele
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