Description

Book Synopsis
This timely volume provides a second collection of Thomas Humphrey's papers in the area of the history of economic thought and is a long-awaited companion to his critically acclaimed first volume of essays Money, Banking and Inflation.

Unlike the first volume, this book does not focus specifically on traditional central bank concerns but addresses key concepts, theories and tools in the area of money, exchange and production which have proved indispensable to the development of economics. Each essay focuses on a prominent theory or tool, examines its essential elements, identifies its origins and traces its development across a succession of economists, problems, controversies and applications. In this way, the book shows how the history of economic thought can be illustrated through the development of tools and concepts rather than through schools of thought and prominent individuals.

This outstanding collection will be invaluable to historians of economic thought as well as to students and scholars of methodology, philosophy and monetary and financial economics.



Table of Contents
Contents: Preface Part I: Monetary Theory 1. The Origins of Velocity Functions 2. Fisher and Wicksell on the Quantity Theory 3. John Wheatley’s Theory of International Monetary Adjustment Part II: Geometry of Exchange (Trade) and Production 4. When Geometry Emerged: Some Neglected Early Contributions to Offer-Curve Analysis 5. The Early History of the Box Diagram Part III: Algebraic Production Functions 6. Algebraic Production Functions and their uses before Cobb-Douglas Index

Money, Exchange and Production: Further Essays in

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    A Hardback by Thomas M. Humphrey

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      Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
      Publication Date: 26/08/1998
      ISBN13: 9781858986524, 978-1858986524
      ISBN10: 1858986524

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This timely volume provides a second collection of Thomas Humphrey's papers in the area of the history of economic thought and is a long-awaited companion to his critically acclaimed first volume of essays Money, Banking and Inflation.

      Unlike the first volume, this book does not focus specifically on traditional central bank concerns but addresses key concepts, theories and tools in the area of money, exchange and production which have proved indispensable to the development of economics. Each essay focuses on a prominent theory or tool, examines its essential elements, identifies its origins and traces its development across a succession of economists, problems, controversies and applications. In this way, the book shows how the history of economic thought can be illustrated through the development of tools and concepts rather than through schools of thought and prominent individuals.

      This outstanding collection will be invaluable to historians of economic thought as well as to students and scholars of methodology, philosophy and monetary and financial economics.



      Table of Contents
      Contents: Preface Part I: Monetary Theory 1. The Origins of Velocity Functions 2. Fisher and Wicksell on the Quantity Theory 3. John Wheatley’s Theory of International Monetary Adjustment Part II: Geometry of Exchange (Trade) and Production 4. When Geometry Emerged: Some Neglected Early Contributions to Offer-Curve Analysis 5. The Early History of the Box Diagram Part III: Algebraic Production Functions 6. Algebraic Production Functions and their uses before Cobb-Douglas Index

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