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Advances in Austrian Economics connects the Austrian tradition of
economics with other research traditions in economics and related
areas. Each volume attempts to apply the insights of Austrian
economics and related approaches to topics that are of current
interest in economics and cognate disciplines. The edited volume
approach delivers ideas from multiple contributors in one book,
providing a forum for variety and contrasting perspectives among
those working in these areas. As such, Advances fills an important
niche in the world of Austrian economics. Austrian school
economists are the primary audience, but this series will appeal to
people working in a variety of positions in economics and related
disciplines. Those working in public choice, new institutionalism,
cognitive or behavior economics, entrepreneurship, and other areas
will find value in the series. Areas of coverage are quite open, as
long as there remains a connection to the ideas associated with the
Austrian school, broadly interpreted.
In Essays on Capital and Interest, Israel Kirzner offers a
consistently 'Austrian'perspective on the problems of capital and
interest theory. In the three classic essays featured in this book,
Professor Kirzner argues that an Austrian approach based on the
pure time preference theory offers an attractive alternative to
both the orthodox neoclassical and the heterodox Sraffian
approaches to economics. The author takes a subjectivist point of
view with all capital and interest phenomena traced to individual
multi-period plans. Capital is seen, in this perspective, not as an
objective mass of tools and equipment, but as the interim state in
which inter-locking multi-period plans have manifested themselves
at a particular point. This consistent subjectivism makes it
possible to present the pure time (Fetter-Mises) preference theory
of interest in understandable terms. Essays on Capital and Interest
begins with an introduction by the author placing his life's work
in the context of twentieth century economics and the decline and
revival of the Austrian school. This volume makes Professor
Kirzner's seminal work available to a wider audience in a major new
edition. It will be welcomed by Austrian economists and all those
concerned with capital and interest theory.
This third volume in the series is divided into four parts. The
first presents a symposium on models of socialism, the second
presents current research, the third, review essays, and the
fourth, book reviews.
This book offers a unique insight into the character of Austrian
economics. This work also collects the recent work of the leading
authorities in this area, and will be an indispensible tool for all
those interested in the implications of Austrian approach on
economics. The author also examines
*the market economy
*theories of Competition and Entrepreneurship
*the Mises-Hayek legacy.
Series Information: Foundations of the Market Economy
For 20 years, Israel Kirzner has been one of the foremost
proponents of the modern Austrian economics in the United States.
In his latest book he extends his analysis of the implications of
the Austrian approach while comparing it to both neo-classical and
radical subjectivist approaches. This theory, while concurring with
many of the major policy implications of neo-classical economics,
sharply dissents from much of the substance and methodology of
neo-classicism. Emphasizing the crucial role of ignorance,
uncertainty, and the passage of time, Austrian economists criticize
the "tight equilibrium" approach of the mainstream. Yet the
Austrians refuse to conclude that the major conclusions of
economics are to be rejected. By introducing the role of the
entrepreneur and of entrepreneurial discovery (an innovation in
which the author's earlier work has played a central role), modern
Austrian economists believe it possible to steer a middle course
between those who believe the world to be at all times in full
co-ordination, and those who believe it to lack any important
co-ordinative properties altogether.
This collection presents the key developments in the 120-year
history of the Austrian School of Economics from the 1870s to the
writings of Mises and Hayek.
This collection presents the key developments in the 120-year
history of the Austrian School of Economics from the 1870s to the
writings of Mises and Hayek.
This collection presents the key developments in the 120-year
history of the Austrian School of Economics from the 1870s to the
writings of Mises and Hayek.
This collection presents the key developments in the 120-year
history of the Austrian School of Economics from the 1870s to the
writings of Mises and Hayek. A number of the papers have had new
translations from German commissioned for this edition, allowing
wider access to these key writings in modern economic thought.
The third volume of The Collected Works of Israel M Kirzner
presents a collection of writings on capital theory that serve both
as a discourse in the history of economic thought and as conceptual
clarification in one of the most complex subjects in economics.
This edition explores the notions of capital and interest in light
of the controversies surrounding these topics. The first essay in
this volume is Kirzner's introduction to the 1996 edition. The
second essay was published as a stand-alone book in 1966 and
presents Kirzner's capital theory, focusing on multi-period
production plans. In the third essay Kirzner offers an
interpretation of Ludwig von Mises's view of capital and interest.
The fourth essay, written in the late 1980s, is Kirzner's attempt
to clarify the difficulties found in interest theory. Finally, the
fifth essay deals with Sir John Hick's capital theory in light of
Kirzner's own Austrian position.
No other economist in recent times has been so closely identified
with the Austrian School of economics as Israel M Kirzner,
professor emeritus of economics at New York University. A leader of
the generation of Austrian economists after Ludwig von Mises and F
A Hayek, Kirzner has been recognised as one of the minds behind the
revival of entrepreneurship and market process theory in the
twentieth century. This book defines Israel M Kirzners unique
contribution to the economics profession. Pointing out the
shortcomings of the traditional microeconomic model, Kirzner offers
an alternative and complementary view, which illuminates and
enriches the way economists think of the market process.
Recognising that economics cannot explain sheer novelty and
ultimately social change by referring only to productive factors
already in use, Kirzner develops a theory of the market process
that focuses on the role of the pure entrepreneurial element in
human action.This leads him to reconstruct the theory of price in
order to understand, as he puts it, how the decisions of individual
participants in the market interact to generate the market forces
which compel changes in prices, outputs, and methods of production
and in the allocation of resources. In doing so, Kirzner offers a
new appraisal of competition moving the entrepreneurial function
back to centre stage, thereby shedding new light on issues such as
monopoly pricing, cartels, and pure profit.
Stressing verbal logic rather than mathematics, Israel M. Kirzner
provides at once a thorough critique of contemporary price theory,
an essay on the theory of entrepreneurship, and an essay on the
theory of competition. Competition and Entrepreneurship offers a
new appraisal of quality competition, of selling effort, and of the
fundamental weaknesses of contemporary welfare economics.
Kirzner's book establishes a theory of the market and the price
system which differs from orthodox price theory. He sees orthodox
price theory as explaining the configuration of prices and
quantities that satisfied the conditions for equilibrium. Mr.
Kirzner argues that it is more useful to look to price theory to
help understand how the decisions of individual participants in the
market interact to generate the market forces which compel changes
in prices, outputs, and methods of production and in the allocation
of resources.
Although Competition and Entrepreneurship is primarily concerned
with the operation of the market economy, Kirzner's insights can be
applied to crucial aspects of centrally planned economic systems as
well. In the analysis of these processes, Kirzner clearly shows
that the rediscovery of the entrepreneur must emerge as a step of
major importance.
The third volume of The Collected Works of Israel M Kirzner
presents a collection of writings on capital theory that serve both
as a discourse in the history of economic thought and as conceptual
clarification in one of the most complex subjects in economics.
This edition explores the notions of capital and interest in light
of the controversies surrounding these topics. The first essay in
this volume is Kirzner's introduction to the 1996 edition. The
second essay was published as a stand-alone book in 1966 and
presents Kirzner's capital theory, focusing on multi-period
production plans. In the third essay Kirzner offers an
interpretation of Ludwig von Mises's view of capital and interest.
The fourth essay, written in the late 1980s, is Kirzner's attempt
to clarify the difficulties found in interest theory. Finally, the
fifth essay deals with Sir John Hick's capital theory in light of
Kirzner's own Austrian position.
The Economic Point of View is the inaugural volume in Liberty
Fund's new Collected Works of Israel M. Kirzner series. This work
established Kirzner as a careful and meticulous scholar of
economics. No other living economist is so closely associated with
the AustrianSchool of economics as Israel M. Kirzner, professor
emeritus of economics at New YorkUniversity. He has been a leader
of the generation of AustrianSchool economists following Ludwig von
Mises and F. A. Hayek.In The Economic Point of View, Kirzner
explores the basic ideas around which the entire body of economic
thought has revolved for some two centuries. He explains how the
"economic point of view" emerged in the development of economic
science since the eighteenth century and through it, the concepts
of purpose, subjectivism, and rationality. Kirzner's incomparable
ability to navigate through the core ideas of economics helps the
reader become progressively familiar with the history of the
discipline and its definition.Within the seven chapters, Kirzner
discusses such subjects as the science of wealth and welfare; the
nature of economic science and the significance of macroeconomics;
and the sciences as human action, including a section on praxeology
and its relationship to the economic point of view. As Mises writes
in his foreword to the volume, "Dr. Kirzner's book . . . is a very
valuable contribution to the history of ideas, describing the march
of economics from a science of wealth to a science of human action.
. . . Every economist-and for that matter everybody interested in
problems of general epistemology-will read with great profit Doctor
Kirzner's analyses."Peter J. Boettke is the BB&T Professor for
the Study of Capitalism at the MercatusCenter and a University
Professor of economics at GeorgeMasonUniversity. His publications
include Why Perestroika Failed: The Economics and Politics of
Socialist Transformation and Calculation and Coordination. Since
1998 he has been the editor of the Review of Austrian Economics.Fr
d ric Sautet is a Senior Research Fellow at the MercatusCenter and
a member of the graduate faculty at GeorgeMasonUniversity. He is
the author ofAn
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