Money, Markets and Capital

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A01=Jean Cartelier
Arrow Debreu Model
Author_Jean Cartelier
Capitalism
Category=KCA
Category=KCBM
Commodity Space
disequilibrium dynamics
Double Coincidence
Entrepreneur economy
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Fiat Money
General Competitive Equilibrium
General Competitive Equilibrium Theory
involuntary unemployment
Involuntary Unemployment Equilibria
Kalecki's Principle
Kalecki’s Principle
Keynesian economics
Legal Coins
Legal Money
Market economy
Minting Basis
Minting Process
Modern Academic Theoreticians
Monetary Analysis
Monetary Equilibrium
monetary theory in capitalist systems
Monetary Unit
Money
Money Theory
Nominal Unit
Out-of Equilibrium Positions
Positive Price
Pure Market Economy
Transaction Technique
value theory
Viability Kernel
viability theory
wage relationship
Walras's Law
Walras’s Law

Product details

  • ISBN 9780815355779
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Apr 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Money and payments are familiar to everybody. Economists however are often at a loss in assessing the extent to which money matters. As a matter of fact, money is at the origin of the main cleavage in economic theory. Beyond sophisticated models what is at stake is whether money is just an appearance which hides the essence of economic life (value and happiness of people) or, on the contrary, the very substance of economic relations, not limited to exchanges, in which power and sovereignty are ever present.

In a first part, the author shows how fragile and shaky are the attempts made by value theoreticians to integrate money into their analysis. In a second part, he develops a rigorous alternative theory by giving strong logical foundations to a monetary analysis in the spirit of Keynes. Many important economic phenomena left unexplained by academic theory are accounted for (involuntary equilibrium unemployment), a new method in dynamics is resorted to (viability theory) and various economic relations are elucidated which are not reducible to exchange, the only one dealt with by academic theoreticians. This is the case of the wage relationship.

Although written in view of an audience acquainted with economic theory, this book can be read nevertheless by a larger circle since the technicalities have been reduced to what is strictly necessary to understand what is at stake.

Jean Cartelier is Professor Emeritus at Paris Nanterre University. His main fields of interest are general economics, money theory and history of economic thought.

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