ABSTRACT

First published in 1930, this book endeavours to trace and express the relations between economic and human values, between wealth and life. Hobson studies everything from the role of production processes and consumption in the determination of human welfare; to the changing attitudes of economic science towards ethical considerations; as well as the tendency of organised society to exercise a control of economic processes in the interests of equity, humanity, and social order.

Part I of the book deals with an attempt to provide an intelligible and consistent meaning for human value and welfare. Part II sketches the emergence of an economic science and its formal relations to ethics. Part III discusses the ethical significance of certain basic factors in the modern economic system, especially property and market processes. Part IV is addressed to the notion of industrial peace and progress in the light of modern humanism, with especial regard to the new problems emerging in a world becoming conscious of its widening unity.

part I|74 pages

Standards of Welfare

chapter Chapter I|7 pages

The Humanist Approach to Economic Life

chapter Chapter II|13 pages

The Meaning of Welfare

chapter Chapter III|22 pages

Welfare Through Community

chapter Chapter IV|25 pages

Standards of Welfare

chapter Chapter V|5 pages

The Hierarchy of Values

part II|63 pages

Ethics in the Evolution of Economic Science

chapter Chapter II|26 pages

The Emergence of Economics as a Science

chapter Chapter II|26 pages

Economic and Ethical Values

part Three|75 pages

The Ethics of Economic Life

chapter Chapter I|26 pages

Ethics of Property

chapter Chapter II|34 pages

Harmony and Discord in Economic Life

chapter Chapter III|13 pages

The Ethics of Bargaining

part IV|242 pages

Organic Reforms of the Economic System

chapter Chapter I|25 pages

The Principle of Equitable Distribution

chapter Chapter II|13 pages

How Far is Equity Attainable?

chapter Chapter III|19 pages

Incentives to Labour

chapter Chapter IV|27 pages

The Supply of Capital

chapter Chapter V|39 pages

Standards of Consumption

chapter Chapter VI|32 pages

An Optimum Population

chapter Chapter VII|18 pages

The State and Industry

chapter Chapter VIII|17 pages

Ethics of Economic Internationalism

chapter Chapter IX|24 pages

Uses and Abuses of Money

chapter Chapter X|26 pages

A Human Survey