The “machinery question” was developed by the economist David Ricardo (1772–1823) in the chapter “On Machinery” added to the third edition of his Principles of Political Economy and Taxation (1821). This question related, in his words, to the “influence of machinery on the interests of the different classes of society” and particularly to the “opinion entertained by the labouring class, that the employment of machinery is frequently detrimental to their interests”. Ricardo’s argument was presented as a recantation of his “previous opinion” on this question and marks the beginning of a debate that is still going on. The purpose of this entry is to simplify this debate by highlighting some weaknesses and strengths in Ricardo’s argument and in...
The development of David Ricardo’s economic theory of distribution - the laws that determine the sha...
The article shows that Ricardo, by describing the decline of employment as a consequence of mechaniz...
David Ricardo's "On Machinery " chapter continues to interest theo-rists and historia...
The “machinery question” was developed by the economist David Ricardo (1772–1823) in the chapter “On...
For those who lived through it, Britain's Industrial Revolution was experienced as the Machinery Que...
Ricardo’s argument on machinery seems to deal both with technical progress and with the substitution...
The aim of the chapter is to highlight that Ricardo’s and Marx’s analysis of the introduction of mac...
In 1838, John Edward Tozer (1806 – 70), a Cambridge mathematician, published an article on “Mathemat...
The examples that are reported in the famous chapter "On Machinery" added by Ricardo in the third ed...
It is generally believed that the addition of the On Machinery chapter to the third edition of the...
The controversy between optimists and pessimists that followed and keeps dividing the economists is ...
The article investigates Wicksell's change of mind about the machinery question between 1890 and 190...
AbstractThe article investigates Wicksell's change of mind about the machinery question between 1890...
PFollowing Wicksell (1934), this paper reformulates Ricardo's (1951, ch.31) argument on the effects ...
Economists and economic historians tend to use the terms capital and machinery interchangeably, even...
The development of David Ricardo’s economic theory of distribution - the laws that determine the sha...
The article shows that Ricardo, by describing the decline of employment as a consequence of mechaniz...
David Ricardo's "On Machinery " chapter continues to interest theo-rists and historia...
The “machinery question” was developed by the economist David Ricardo (1772–1823) in the chapter “On...
For those who lived through it, Britain's Industrial Revolution was experienced as the Machinery Que...
Ricardo’s argument on machinery seems to deal both with technical progress and with the substitution...
The aim of the chapter is to highlight that Ricardo’s and Marx’s analysis of the introduction of mac...
In 1838, John Edward Tozer (1806 – 70), a Cambridge mathematician, published an article on “Mathemat...
The examples that are reported in the famous chapter "On Machinery" added by Ricardo in the third ed...
It is generally believed that the addition of the On Machinery chapter to the third edition of the...
The controversy between optimists and pessimists that followed and keeps dividing the economists is ...
The article investigates Wicksell's change of mind about the machinery question between 1890 and 190...
AbstractThe article investigates Wicksell's change of mind about the machinery question between 1890...
PFollowing Wicksell (1934), this paper reformulates Ricardo's (1951, ch.31) argument on the effects ...
Economists and economic historians tend to use the terms capital and machinery interchangeably, even...
The development of David Ricardo’s economic theory of distribution - the laws that determine the sha...
The article shows that Ricardo, by describing the decline of employment as a consequence of mechaniz...
David Ricardo's "On Machinery " chapter continues to interest theo-rists and historia...