This title covers a broad range of topics in the history of
economics that have relevance to economic theories at the beginning
of the 21st century. The author believes that one of the tasks for
a historian of economics is to analyze and interpret theories
currently outside the mainstream of economic theory, in this case
non-Walrasian economics. By doing so, he argues, new directions and
new areas for research can be developed that will extend the
current theories. Familiar topics covered include: the division of
labour, economies of scale, wages, profit, international trade,
market mechanisms, and money. These are considered in the light of
the well-known non-Walrasian schools of thought: the classical,
Marxian, Austrian, and Cambridge schools.
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