Capital in the Twenty-First CenturyHarvard University Press, 14 ago 2017 - 816 pagine A New York Times #1 Bestseller |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 6-10 di 71
... economists of the nineteenth century and who both believed that a small social group—landowners for Ricardo, industrial capitalists for Marx—would inevitably claim a steadily increasing share of output and income.2 For Ricardo, who ...
... economist Karl Marx (1818–1883). He settled in Manchester in 1842, where he managed a factory owned by his father. 5. The historian Robert Allen recently proposed to call this long period of wage stagnation “Engels' pause.” See Allen ...
... economists (who saw the market as a self-regulated system, that is, a system capable of achieving equilibrium on its own without major deviations, in accordance with Adam Smith's image of “the invisible hand” and Jean-Baptiste Say's ...
... economists today would do well to take inspiration from his example. Even more important, the principle of infinite accumulation that Marx proposed contains a key insight, as valid for the study of the twentyfirst century as it was for ...
... economist, born in Ukraine in 1901, who settled in the United States in 1922 and became a professor at Harvard after studying at Columbia University. He died in 1985. He was the first person to study the national accounts of the United ...
Sommario
1 | |
47 | |
The Dynamics of the CapitalIncome Ratio | 139 |
The Structure of Inequality | 295 |
Regulating Capital in the TwentyFirst Century | 595 |
Contents in Detail | 755 |
List of Tables and Illustrations | 765 |
Index | 771 |