History of Italian Economic Thought

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A01=Riccardo Faucci
Accademia Dei Georgofili
Annali Universali Di Statistica
Attilio Cabiati
Author_Riccardo Faucci
Beccaria
Book III
Cassa Del Mezzogiorno
Category=GTM
Category=KCA
Category=KCP
Category=KCZ
Cognetti De Martiis
Della Moneta
Demarcation
Demarcation Line
Double Difference Method
economic liberalism Italy
Economic Theories
Economic thought
Economics
Enlightenment economic theory
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
F. Ferrara
Galiani
Giuseppe Toniolo
historical economic schools
History of Italian Thought
International Monetary Fund
Italian economic thought development
italy
Land Reclamation
Luigi Einaudi
Luigi Luzzatti
Monti Cabinet
Nuova Antologia
Paolo Sylos Labini
political economy Italy
Politics
Public Administration
public finance history
Reproduction Cost
Restoration Period
Riforma Sociale
Scienza Delle Finanze
Social Structure
Sociology
Sraffa debate analysis
Sylos Labini
Verri
Vice Versa
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415519830
  • Weight: 670g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Apr 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book provides the non-Italian scholar with an extensive picture of the development of Italian economics, from the Sixteenth century to the present. The thread of the narrative is the dialectics between economic theory and political action, where the former attempts to enlighten the latter, but at the same time receives from politics the main stimulus to enlarge its field of reflection. This is particularly clear during the Enlightenment. Inside, this book insists on stressing that Galiani, Verri, and Beccaria were economists quite sensitive to practical issues, but who also were willing to attain generally valid conclusions. In this sense, "pure economics" was never performed in Italy. Even Pareto used economics (and sociology) in order to interpret and possibly steer the course of political action.

Within this book it illustrates the Restoration period (1815-48). There was a slowdown of the economists' engagement, due to an adverse political situation, that prompted the economists to prefer less dangerous subjects, such as the relationship between economics, morals, and law (the main interpreter of this attitude was Romagnosi). After 1848, however, in parallel with the Risorgimento cultural climate, a new vision of the economists' task was eventually manifested. Between economics and political Liberalism a sort of alliance was established, whose prophet was F. Ferrara. While the Historical school of economics of German origin played a minor role, Pure Economics (1890-1940 approx.) had a considerable success, as regards both economic equilibrium and the theory of public finance. Consequently, the introduction of Keynes's ideas was rather troubled. Instead, Hayek had an immediate success.

This book concludes with a chapter devoted to the intense relationships between economic theories, economic programmes and political action after 1945. Here, the Sraffa debate played an important role in stimulating Italian economists to a reflection on the patterns of Italian economy and the possibilities of transforming Italy's economic and social structure.

Riccardo Faucci is Full Professor of the History of Economic Thought at the Pisa University, Italy. He is co-editor of History of Economic Ideas.

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