ABSTRACT

First published in 1968, this is the second part of Professor Meade’s Principles of Political Economy, which presents a systematic treatment of the whole field of economic analysis in the form of a series of simplified models which are specifically designed to show the interconnections between the various specialist fields of economic theory.

In this volume, Professor Meade is concerned with the theory of economic growth and the rates at which various economic quantities are growing. In order to do this, he introduces capital goods into the system and allows for growth through capital accumulation, population expansion and technical progress. His analysis is divided into two models: a one product model and a many-product model.

part 1|260 pages

The One-Product Model

chapter I|7 pages

Six Assumptions

chapter IX|7 pages

The Determinants of Technical Progress

chapter X|29 pages

Demographic Adjustment

chapter XI|41 pages

Population Growth and the Standard of Living

chapter XII|32 pages

Savings: (1) Perfect Selfishness

chapter XIII|42 pages

Savings: (2) Perfect Altruism

chapter XIV|19 pages

From Propdem or Plantcap to Propcap

part 2|227 pages

The Many-Product Model

chapter XV|20 pages

Capitalistic Production with Many Products

chapter XVII|23 pages

The Stationary State

chapter XVIII|16 pages

Equilibrium Growth in a Competitive Economy

chapter XIX|30 pages

Planned Growth in a Socialist Economy

chapter XX|24 pages

A Four-Product Model

chapter XXI|32 pages

Risk, Uncertainty, and Enterprise

chapter XXII|31 pages

Three Methods of Reducing Risk and Uncertainty