ABSTRACT

First published in 1986. Since the late 1960s the seeming inability of traditional monetary and fiscal policies to combat " stagflation" and address other macroeconomic issues has accelerated the erosion of confidence in the prevailing economic paradigm , the " neoclassical synthesis." * Dissensions among the members of the economics profession on both sides of the Atlantic have grown in number. By the 1970s, a majority of economists had recognized a " crisis" in economic theory. Parallel to this development, a crisis has also emerged in the Marxian camp. This volume is a discussion from the various schools of thought around three of the salient common grounds follows: the theory of a monetary economy, the disequilibrium foundations of a general equilibrium theory, and a rekindled interest in institutional factors.

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

part I|63 pages

Contemporary Reinterpretations of Classicism

chapter Chapter 1|19 pages

The “Supply-Side” Economics of Adam Smith

chapter Chapter 2|28 pages

The “Supply-Side” Economics of David Ricardo

chapter Chapter 4|5 pages

Causality in Classical Economics

part II|63 pages

Contemporary Reinterpretations of the Neoclassical Synthesis

chapter Chapter 6|37 pages

The Revisionists of the “Neoclassical Synthesis”

chapter Chapter 7|4 pages

Causality in the “Neoclassical Synthesis”

part III|44 pages

Contemporary Reinterpretations of Post-Keynesianism

chapter Chapter 8|42 pages

The Post-Keynesian Alternative Paradigm

part IV|53 pages

The Widening Common Ground in Economic Analysis