ABSTRACT

The four sections of the book deal in succession with Marshall’s key ideas on the subject, the wider context of his thought in which they are to be read, their later development by some of his pupils, and their revival in contemporary economics. The first and last sections work together to illustrate the evolutionary focus of Marshall’s research program and to identify its affinity with modern industrial economics; the second explicates the social assumptions within which the Marshallian paradigm was embedded, in particular those relating to the various relationships that exist between individuals and wider groups; while the third traces the development of Marshall’s views by some of his pupils.

 

chapter |9 pages

Introduction

From the Wanderjahre to the revival of Marshall's industrial economics*

part |54 pages

Marshall's industrial economics

part |68 pages

Wider perspectives

chapter |14 pages

Analysing What Cannot be Modeled

A defence of Marshallian equilibrium analysis*

part |95 pages

The Marshallian school

chapter |28 pages

The Lancashire Industrial District

Its rise, prosperity and decline in the analysis of British economists

chapter |18 pages

Two Marshallians

Layton and the early MacGregor

chapter |16 pages

Philip Sargant Florence

An economic sociologist