ABSTRACT

Whilst there is widespread agreement about the goals of economic policy, consensus about how best to achieve them can be harder to achieve. No issues are more contentious than employment and income distribution. In recent years full employment and a just distribution of incomes have been downgraded as policy objectives, as greater priority has been given to price stability and balance of payments objectives. This emphasis has been supported by a mainstream economic theory which has an unswerving belief in the ability of market forces to achieve a satisfactory regulation of employment and income distribution
Other economists have remained more sceptical, and none more so than Kurt Rothschild. This new volume collects together his twenty two most important essays in the area, many of which are appearing in English for the first time. Throughout pure theory is linked to relevant practical investigations.

part |2 pages

Part II Wages

chapter 9|7 pages

Wage levels and employment

chapter 10|10 pages

Approaches to the theory of bargaining

chapter 11|7 pages

Wages and risk-bearing

chapter 12|37 pages

The Phillips curve and all that

chapter 14|12 pages

Is there a Weitzman miracle?

part |2 pages

Part III Income distribution

chapter 15|34 pages

The share of wages in total income

Some remarks on a disputed problem

chapter 18|15 pages

Different approaches in distribution theory

A note on Mr Ferguson’s two-sector variant of Kaldor’s distribution model