Income Distribution Theory

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A01=Martin Bronfenbrenner
advanced income distribution models
Author_Martin Bronfenbrenner
Average Net Product
Capital Labor Substitution
Category=KC
collective bargaining theory
curve
economic inequality
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Excess Demand
Follow
Functional Income Distribution
imperfect competition
Income Distribution Theory
Incomes Received
input
Input Demand
Input Prices
Interest Rate
Irving Kravis
Keynesian analysis
labor
Labor Share
Linear Homogeneous
Long Run Competitive Equilibrium
marginal
Marginal Net Product
Marginal Productivity
Money Wage Rate
neoclassical economics
Nonunion Sector
Output Price
Personal Income Distribution
phillips
Phillips Curve
poverty measurement
price
Production Function
productivity
rate
Relative Shares
share
Vice Versa
wage
Wage Price Guideposts

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138525986
  • Weight: 816g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Jul 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This is a well-grounded restatement, defense, and development of the theory of income distribution in both its micro- and macroeconomic aspects. The author, an authority in the field who has spent many years developing the ideas in this book, balances neoclassical theories with Keynesian and "radical" approaches. He considers income distribution theory in terms of ideology, statistics, micro- and macroeconomics, income policies, and the poverty problem. The result is a distinctive and comprehensive treatment of a subject that has polarized many economists over many decades. Bronfenbrenner reacts against conventional theories that concentrate on output markets, virtually ignoring input prices. He also opposes the brand of institutionalism that regards "democratic business unionism" as an American institution that can do no wrong. Overall, Bronfenbrenner presents an eclectic defense of a "traditional" theory of economics that has been under attack from rival viewpoints with insufficient rebuttal, and that proves to be a powerful tool of analysis in dealing with this subject. The book is organized into three main parts: an ideological and statistical personal introduction to income distribution, microeconomic distribution theory, and macroeconomic distribution theory. A final chapter considers incomes policies, with a rather skeptical view of the prospects for political control of income distribution within a basically free economy. The manuscript has been widely used and class tested over the past thirty-five years. The book will be useful to professional economists. It may be used as a basic text in courses on income distribution and as a supplementary text in microeconomic theory.

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