Austrian Economics in Debate

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A01=Bert Tieben
A01=Rudy Van Zijp
A01=Willem Keizer
Austrian Economics
Austrian Paradigm
Author_Bert Tieben
Author_Rudy Van Zijp
Author_Willem Keizer
Bert Tieben
business cycle theory
Calculation Debate
Carlo Zappia
Category=KCA
Constant Conjunctions
Contemporary Austrians
economic methodology
Emiel F.M. Wubben
entrepreneurial theory
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
GE Model
Hayek Marx methodological comparison
Hayek's Business Cycle Theory
Hayek's Knowledge Problem
Hayek's Notion
Hayek's Review
Hayek's Theory
Hayekian contributions
Hayekian Expectations
Hayek’s Business Cycle Theory
Hayek’s Knowledge Problem
Hayek’s Notion
Hayek’s Review
Hayek’s Theory
Informative Equilibria
institutional economics
Intertemporal Discoordination
Intertemporal Equilibrium
Invisible Hand Explanation
J. Patrick Gunning
Laurence S. Moss
Leland B. Yeager
Ludwig Von Mises
micro- and macroeconomic theory
Monetary Equilibrium
Nicolai J. Foss
Part Iii
Personal Ineptitude
Post-Keynesian analysis
post-Keynesian Economics
Property Rights Approach
Richard M. Ebeling
socialist calculation problem
Steve Fleetwood
Walrasian GE
Walrasian General Equilibrium Model
William N. Butos

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415756891
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Sep 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book presents essays by an outstanding team of international specialists and covers a wide range of topics, including (inter alia) the relationships between the Austrian and Swedish theories of the business cycle, the on-going debates between Austrians and (Post) Keynesians, Schumpeter's 'Walrasian' stand in the socialist calculation debate, and the Austrian roots of Neo-Institutional economics. The studies stress the unique Austrian contributions to economic methodology and to the theory of entrepreneurship, while revealing unexpected methodological and philosophical similarities between, among others, Hayek and Marx.
Willem Keizer, Bert Tieben, Rudy Van Zijp

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