ABSTRACT

This volume examines the macrodynamic behaviour of advanced economies with social institutions similar to those of the United States and other members of the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development. It is a critique of, and provides alternative models to, conventional neoclassical theory. The principles developed are used to explain two major phenomena in economic life: the nation's secular growth rate and the cyclical deviations around that growth. These interdependent movements of trend and cycle constitute the economy's macrodynamic behaviour. Eichner uses a systems framework for integrating four distinct institutional dimensions in society - the normative, the political, the economic, and the anthropogenic. This book, by one of the leading proponents of Post-Keynesian economics, is the culmination of over 13 years of scholarly work. The author's untimely death in February 1988 prevented the final revisions of his manuscript. The book should prove an essential addition to the library of scholars and students of economics both within and outside the Post-Keynesian tradition.

chapter Chapter 1|35 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 2|72 pages

The Accounting Framework

chapter Chapter 3|36 pages

From Statics to Dynamics

chapter Chapter 4|91 pages

Growth Models

chapter Chapter 6|90 pages

The Enterprise Sector: Prices and Pricing

chapter Chapter 7|113 pages

The Enterprise Sector: Investment and Finance

chapter Chapter 8|85 pages

The Household Sector: Income Distribution

chapter Chapter 9|71 pages

The Household Sector: Expenditures and Cash Balances

chapter Chapter 10|105 pages

The Government and Not-for-Profit Sector

chapter Chapter 12|61 pages

Money and Credit

chapter Chapter 13|81 pages

The Exogenous Supply Constraints

chapter Chapter 11|84 pages

The Rest-of-the-World Sector