This work presents and discusses chapter two of Marc Lavoie’s book Post-Keynesian Economics: New Foundations. It begins by analysing the concepts of uncertainty and rationality which are extremely important for the post Keynesian approach, and for economic theorizing in general. The notions of fundamental uncertainty and the closely related concept of procedural rationality, are employed in order to build the foundations of a theory of household choice. It proceeds by investigating the repercussions of the theory in a lexicographic/hierarchical analytical framework. In this framework, groups consume different goods depending on their respective needs, income effects are more important than substitution effects, and price competition has a s...
markdownabstractBeing labeled as a social science, much of economics is about understanding human be...
and Kahn and the disappearance of the precautionary demand for money from liquidity preference theor...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3597.96627(01/01) / BLDSC - British L...
This short paper is the entry on Post-Keynesian theory of choice for the Encyclopedia of Political E...
International audienceThe traditional view of Keynes's theory as 'macroeconomics', rather than the t...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3597.97957(LU-SBES-DP-E--96/15) / BLD...
Consumption theory has always been a neglected fi eld in post-Keynesian eco-nomics, whereas it is at...
This chapter explains the role of consumption expenditures in modern economies and their significanc...
This book offers a rigorous, concise, and nontechnical introduction to some of the fundamental insig...
Mainstream perspectives involving uncertainty presume that expectations are based on either a statis...
The present contribution examines the emergence of expected utility theory by John von Neumann and O...
The literature on the history of the mathematically formalized areas of economic theory has expanded...
The purpose of this paper is to revisit Keynes's ideas on knowledge, expectations and rationality in...
The debate on the concept of rationality is key to the epistemological status of economics: starting...
The theory of expected utility is suggested by John Von Neumann and Oscar Morgenstern in 1944 and ha...
markdownabstractBeing labeled as a social science, much of economics is about understanding human be...
and Kahn and the disappearance of the precautionary demand for money from liquidity preference theor...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3597.96627(01/01) / BLDSC - British L...
This short paper is the entry on Post-Keynesian theory of choice for the Encyclopedia of Political E...
International audienceThe traditional view of Keynes's theory as 'macroeconomics', rather than the t...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3597.97957(LU-SBES-DP-E--96/15) / BLD...
Consumption theory has always been a neglected fi eld in post-Keynesian eco-nomics, whereas it is at...
This chapter explains the role of consumption expenditures in modern economies and their significanc...
This book offers a rigorous, concise, and nontechnical introduction to some of the fundamental insig...
Mainstream perspectives involving uncertainty presume that expectations are based on either a statis...
The present contribution examines the emergence of expected utility theory by John von Neumann and O...
The literature on the history of the mathematically formalized areas of economic theory has expanded...
The purpose of this paper is to revisit Keynes's ideas on knowledge, expectations and rationality in...
The debate on the concept of rationality is key to the epistemological status of economics: starting...
The theory of expected utility is suggested by John Von Neumann and Oscar Morgenstern in 1944 and ha...
markdownabstractBeing labeled as a social science, much of economics is about understanding human be...
and Kahn and the disappearance of the precautionary demand for money from liquidity preference theor...
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3597.96627(01/01) / BLDSC - British L...