The analysis of a sustained long-run equilibrium path of economic growth goes back to Marx’s discussion of the schemes of reproduction and capital accumulation. In this paper, we indicate that the Harrodian ‘knife edge’ instability is a feature of the inner nature of the capitalist mode of production that is explained by the evolution of the rate of surplus-value. A fundamental category in Marx’s analysis, which is not restricted to income distribution, but also has further repercussions, which we grapple with in our analysis. In particular, we argue that the unbalanced economic growth path is the macroeconomic manifestation of the consequent antithesis between productive forces and productive relations formed during the process of capital ...
A reconstruction of Marxian hypotheses and thoughts pertaining to theoretical interpretation of cri...
This paper sets out a Marxian model that is based on the one by Stephen Marglin with one sector and ...
This paper examines, both descriptively and analytically, Marx's arguments for the falling rate of p...
One of the most important contributions of Marx’s economics has been the reproduction schema develop...
Harrod's contribution to economic dynamics is very often reduced to the dynamic equation whose chara...
This research line is partly inserted in the recent international debate about Marx and Non-Equilibr...
Marx's theory of the falling rate of profit makes two main appearances in his work. The first is in...
The question of the long-run prospects of profitability and its association with the stage of capita...
By reconsidering the concept of normal degree of utilization in view of the fact that growth occurs...
What is very often overlooked in the literature is that the Harrod’s Post- Keynesian growth mo...
were concerned with the long-run development of an economy. This holds in particular for Karl Marx, ...
In the numerical examples used by Marx to study the reproduction of social capital, the economy reac...
Abstract: This paper sets out a Marxian model that is based on the one by Stephen Marglin with one s...
The aim of this paper is to show that Marx supports his theory of surplus value by developing a coun...
Marx-Engels’ numerical illustrations of the extended reproduction suggest that a two-sector economy ...
A reconstruction of Marxian hypotheses and thoughts pertaining to theoretical interpretation of cri...
This paper sets out a Marxian model that is based on the one by Stephen Marglin with one sector and ...
This paper examines, both descriptively and analytically, Marx's arguments for the falling rate of p...
One of the most important contributions of Marx’s economics has been the reproduction schema develop...
Harrod's contribution to economic dynamics is very often reduced to the dynamic equation whose chara...
This research line is partly inserted in the recent international debate about Marx and Non-Equilibr...
Marx's theory of the falling rate of profit makes two main appearances in his work. The first is in...
The question of the long-run prospects of profitability and its association with the stage of capita...
By reconsidering the concept of normal degree of utilization in view of the fact that growth occurs...
What is very often overlooked in the literature is that the Harrod’s Post- Keynesian growth mo...
were concerned with the long-run development of an economy. This holds in particular for Karl Marx, ...
In the numerical examples used by Marx to study the reproduction of social capital, the economy reac...
Abstract: This paper sets out a Marxian model that is based on the one by Stephen Marglin with one s...
The aim of this paper is to show that Marx supports his theory of surplus value by developing a coun...
Marx-Engels’ numerical illustrations of the extended reproduction suggest that a two-sector economy ...
A reconstruction of Marxian hypotheses and thoughts pertaining to theoretical interpretation of cri...
This paper sets out a Marxian model that is based on the one by Stephen Marglin with one sector and ...
This paper examines, both descriptively and analytically, Marx's arguments for the falling rate of p...