ABSTRACT

Drawing in particular on the work of Sraffa, Smith, Ricardo and Marx, the essays in this volume explore the characteristic features of the Classical economists’ approach to economic problems, and the renewal of interest in that approach in modern times.

In recent years, new material has been made available on both Sraffa and Marx which have made new insights and interpretations possible. The release of Sraffa’s hitherto unpublished papers and correspondence has led to reconsideration of doctrinal questions such as to what extent Sraffa built upon, or deviated from the analyses of Adam Smith, David Ricardo and other representatives of the classical British school and Karl Marx. A major theme is also to what extent we can today, equipped with Sraffa's insights and analytical tools, re-interpret and develop ideas of classical authors, which they could present only in primitive forms, on technological progress, exhaustible resources and other contemporary issues. On Marx, the publication of the MEGA2 edition of the works, papers and correspondence of Marx and Engels also gives rise to a reconsideration of this relationship, given Marx's disenchantment with some of his own work and return to ideas advocated by Ricardo, especially as regards the long-term tendency of the rate of profits. Finally, the classical notion of competition and monopoly deserve to be scrutinized carefully again and frequent misinterpretations in the literature refuted.

This volume is vital reading for scholars of classical economics, Marx and Sraffa, and the history of economic thought more broadly. It also deals with issues in the areas of machinery and technical progress, joint production, and economic development and growth.

chapter 1|6 pages

Introduction

part I|65 pages

Classical economics, old and new

chapter 2|32 pages

David Ricardo

On the art of ‘elucidating economic principles’ in the face of a ‘labyrinth of difficulties’

chapter 3|16 pages

Ricardo on machinery

An analysis of Ricardo's examples

chapter 4|15 pages

Mark Blaug revisited

A rebel with many causes

part II|68 pages

On Sraffa's contribution

chapter 5|25 pages

The construction of long-run market supply curves

Some notes on Sraffa's critique of partial equilibrium analyses

part III|105 pages

Production of commodities by means of commodities in its making

chapter 9|46 pages

Don't treat too ill my Piero!

Interpreting Sraffa's papers

chapter 11|19 pages

Piero Sraffa's early work on joint production

Probing into the intricacies of multiple-product systems

part IV|78 pages

Competition and monopoly