ABSTRACT

The issue of planning prompted some of the fiercest debate in mid-twentieth century economics. Politics of Economic Planning collects together a number of papers from journals and contributed books that examine the problems of economic planning in a free society. They fall into three groups:

Part 1 explains the idea of socialism and defines it in relation to democracy.
Part 2 discusses problems of economic planning both in relation to political economy on the practice of planning and with the application of the theory of value to the conditions of a centrally directed economy.
Part 3 examines the nature of economics.

part I|37 pages

The Meaning of Socialism

chapter 1|27 pages

The Case for Socialism

Four National Faults

chapter 2|8 pages

Democracy and Socialism in Great Britain1

part II|117 pages

Problems of a Planned Economy

chapter 3|17 pages

The Importance of Planning1

chapter 4|33 pages

The Problems of the Socialised Sector

chapter 5|16 pages

Professor Hayek On Economic Planning

chapter 6|20 pages

Government Administration and Efficiency1

chapter 7|13 pages

Social Significance of the Theory of Value

chapter 8|16 pages

Economic Calculus in a Planned Economy

part III|54 pages

Economics

chapter 9|22 pages

The Nature of Economics

chapter 10|15 pages

Methods of Research