ABSTRACT

First published in 1990, this is an analysis of the history of western economics from Petty to Supply-Side, through the prism of the controversies over productive labour and its product. It treats the early economists’ "productive-unproductive" dichotomies as shorthands for many other sets of distinctions relevant for boundaries, value and welfare. Central to the debates is the question of whether the economy is said to generate a ‘surplus’. Economists and politicians with views on these matters include the Physiocrats, Smith and Ricardo, Marx and his Soviet and western admirers, the marginalists, Keynes, Polanyi, Becker, and Reagan. The book maps the shifting emphases that economists and social thinkers have placed on markets and ‘mode’ of production generally. This reissue will be useful to students of economic thought, welfare theory and policy, growth economics and economic systems.

part 1|106 pages

Rise and Decline of the Classical–Marxian Surplus and Transfer Theory

part 2|68 pages

In a New Mode

part 3|100 pages

Revisions and Extensions

chapter 8|31 pages

Drawing the Boundary: The Main Variants

chapter 10|16 pages

Results, Not Inputs