Reconstructing Political Economy: The Great Divide in Economic Thought

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Psychology Press, 1999 - 287 páginas

This volume offers an original perspective on the questions the great economists have asked and looks at their significance for todays world. Written in a provocative and accessible style, it examines how the diverse traditions of political economy have conceptualised economic issues, events and theory. Going beyond the orthodoxies of mainstream economics it shows the relevance of political economy to the debates on the economic meaning of our times.
Reconstructing Political Economy is a timely and thought-provoking contribution to a political economy for our time. In this light it offers fresh insights into such issues as modern theories of growth, the historic relations between state and market and the significance of globalisation for modern societies.

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Contenido

The two cultures in economics
1
Of dialogic debates and the uncertain embrace 223
17
the Adam Smith problem
32
The legacies of classical political economy
53
Marx and the long run
75
The neoclassical counter revolution
91
Heterodoxy and holism
111
Keynes and the world turned upside down
132
The last halfcentury in the mainstream
154
Theorizing economic growth
177
From equilibrium into history
203
Notes
226
References
250
Index
281
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