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The investment good market, together with the consumer good market,
the money market and the labour market, are indeed the most
extensively studied markets. The exhaustive survey of investment
theory by Eisner and Strotz, already quoted four hundred references
in 1963, although this work advocating for adjustment costs, was in
fact only carried out at the very beginning of modern investment
theory! This chapter gives an introduction of the extensive field
and is an attempt to present some key ideas of investment theory.
1) We show that modern investment theory is the integration of many
traditional approaches. The content of the chapter is set as
follows. Section 2 presents an illustrative model of investment
theory. Section 3, using this model, describes the investment
decision of the firm. Sections 4 to 10 each present a "classical"
investment hypothesis within the framework of the model. Section 11
concludes. For convenience, the key to the symbols used is given in
Table 1. 2. The Model of the Firm Investment theory was born with
the claim of Keynes (1936) that besides the capital demand (demand
for a stock of capital at a point in time), an investment demand
(demand for the increment of the capital stock in a period 1)
Recent surveys are: Abel (1988), Coen and Eisner (1987) Artus and
Muet (1984). The book on investment theory by Nickell (1978) is
outstanding.
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