Social Fairness and Economics

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Arbitrage Pricing Theory
Average Establishment Size
black swan
black swans
Boltzmann Gibbs Distribution
capital flows
Category=JHBA
Category=KCA
Category=KCC
Category=KCP
Cellular Automata
Classical Marxian Models
complexity concept
complexity theory
decentralised exchange
decentralized exchange
distribution of income
distribution of money
distribution of wealth
distributive justice
duncan foley
economic justice
endogenous growth
Endogenous Technological Change
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
festschrift
financial crisis modelling
financial markets
fiscal policy
fiscal policy analysis
foley
GE Theory
general equilibrium critique
General Rate
Halting Problem
heterodox economic methodologies
income distribution
interdisciplinary economics
Keynes
labour value theory
market ecology
michl
Net Debt
Pe Rc
rezai
Ricardo's Search
Ricardo’s Search
Santa Fe Institute
Short Term Equilibria
social fairness
social justice
Social Reproduction
social returns
Social Welfare Function
Speculative Asset Market
Steady State Growth Rate
Sustainable Preferences
taylor
technological change
TFP Growth
Turing Machine
Vice Versa
Vp
Wage Share
wealth distribution

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138902251
  • Weight: 589g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Mar 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This volume brings together papers inspired by the work of Duncan Foley, an extraordinarily productive economist who has made seminal contributions to a wide variety of areas. Foley’s work cannot be easily classified, but one thread that runs through it is a critical examination (along both ethical and analytical lines) of conventional neoclassical economic theory, particularly involving general equilibrium theories of value and money. Foley was a pioneer of complexity economics as well, which adopts approaches to these questions drawn from natural sciences, so the collection therefore has an interdisciplinary quality that will interest a wide variety of readers.

Some of the chapters are intellectual biographies that contextualize and identify Foley’s contributions to Keynesian macroeconomics, Marxian value theory, and complexity theory in economics. The topics covered include the economics of complexity; the ethics of general equilibrium theory; the economics of climate change; applications of Keynesian, Marxian and Ricardian political economy; and money and financial crises.

The collection should be useful to scholars who work in various economic traditions critical of the currently dominant free-market approach, but it also speaks to scholars of critical theory in various disciplines beyond economics such as the mathematicians, physicists, and other natural scientists who are interested in understanding the complexity of social processes using their analytical frameworks. This book should also appeal to graduate students in economics who are working in these traditions, as well as scholars (including current graduate students in orthodox programs) who are dissatisfied with the current state of economic theory and would like to satisfy their intellectual curiosity by sampling the contributions of critical theorists.

Lance Taylor is Arnhold Professor Emeritus of International Cooperation and Development at the New School University, New York, USA

Armon Rezai is Assistant Professor in Environmental Economics at the Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria

Thomas Michl is Professor of Economics at Colgate University, Hamilton, USA