In this paper we examine the criticism that Knut Wicksell advanced against Walras’s treatment of capital and interest at the end of the nineteenth century, as well as the reaction of Walras’s followers. As regards the first aspect, it should be noted that the criticism raised at that time refers to the earlier editions of the Éléments, in which circulating capital is excluded from the analysis. We thus endeavour to clarify Wicksell’s remarks on the consequences of that exclusion for both the representation of the social production process and the determination of the interest rate. As to the second aspect, our discussion of the reaction to Wicksell’s criticism shows that the appropriate way of dealing with the capitalistic element of produc...
This paper examines Frank Knight’s views on socialism and on capital and interest in light of some r...
While the two-Cambridge controversy brings new interest on conceptual issues related to the theory o...
The idea that capital theory might lead economists to discover forms of ‘paradoxical’ behaviour has ...
We examine the criticism that Knut Wicksell advanced against Léon Walras’s treatment of capital and ...
This critique of Malinvaud’s article of 2003 on Wicksell’s legacy to capital theory focuses in parti...
After Wicksell in 1911 had published the second Swedish edition of his Lectures on Political Economy...
The difficulties in traditional capital theory, which have recently given rise to the reswitching of...
This critique of Malinvaud’s article of 2003 on Wicksell’s legacy to capital theory focuses in parti...
The primary aim of this paper is not to comment Walras’ theories of capitalization and money, but to...
In recent years, discussions around Marx’s Capital have been mainly related to assessment of the Eng...
This paper takes advantage of the episode of the Methodenstreit of the late nineteenth century to de...
The chapter analyses the significance of Bourdieu’s concept of capital and addresses the highly cont...
The Böhm-Bawerk- Clark debate is overlooked and misinterpreted in capital theory, despite its influ...
This book deals with the Cambridge capital theory controversies both from a historical and from an a...
The objective of this thesis is to provide an overview of the development of the theory of capital u...
This paper examines Frank Knight’s views on socialism and on capital and interest in light of some r...
While the two-Cambridge controversy brings new interest on conceptual issues related to the theory o...
The idea that capital theory might lead economists to discover forms of ‘paradoxical’ behaviour has ...
We examine the criticism that Knut Wicksell advanced against Léon Walras’s treatment of capital and ...
This critique of Malinvaud’s article of 2003 on Wicksell’s legacy to capital theory focuses in parti...
After Wicksell in 1911 had published the second Swedish edition of his Lectures on Political Economy...
The difficulties in traditional capital theory, which have recently given rise to the reswitching of...
This critique of Malinvaud’s article of 2003 on Wicksell’s legacy to capital theory focuses in parti...
The primary aim of this paper is not to comment Walras’ theories of capitalization and money, but to...
In recent years, discussions around Marx’s Capital have been mainly related to assessment of the Eng...
This paper takes advantage of the episode of the Methodenstreit of the late nineteenth century to de...
The chapter analyses the significance of Bourdieu’s concept of capital and addresses the highly cont...
The Böhm-Bawerk- Clark debate is overlooked and misinterpreted in capital theory, despite its influ...
This book deals with the Cambridge capital theory controversies both from a historical and from an a...
The objective of this thesis is to provide an overview of the development of the theory of capital u...
This paper examines Frank Knight’s views on socialism and on capital and interest in light of some r...
While the two-Cambridge controversy brings new interest on conceptual issues related to the theory o...
The idea that capital theory might lead economists to discover forms of ‘paradoxical’ behaviour has ...