The purpose of this note is to supplement the author’s earlier remarks on the unsatisfactory nature of the neoclassical account of how the return on capital is determined. (See Strathclyde Discussion Paper 12-03: “The Marginal Productivity Theory of the Price of Capital: An Historical Perspective on the Origins of the Codswallop”). The point is made via a simple illustration that certain matters which are problematical in neoclassical terms are perfectly straightforward when viewed from a classical perspective. Basically, the marginalist model of the nature of an economic system is not fit for purpose in that it fails to comprehend the essential features of a surplus-producing economic system as distinct from one merely of exchange
This book deals with the Cambridge capital theory controversies both from a historical and from an a...
Neoclassical theory erroneously makes the assumption that firms maximise profits on a fixed endowmen...
This paper addresses the theoretical explanation of profit and interest within three different appro...
The purpose of this note is to supplement the author’s earlier remarks on the unsatisfactory nature ...
Although it might have been expected that, by this point in time, the unacceptability of the margina...
Although it might have been expected that, by this point in time, the unacceptability of the margina...
The equality between factor pay and marginal product is a major component of the neoclassical paradi...
The equality between factor pay and marginal product is a major component of the neoclassical paradi...
The paper addresses the ambiguity that surrounds the conception of capital and its role in neoclassi...
In the traditional versions of the neoclassical theory of value and distribution, the stock of exist...
This paper argues that Keynes’s analysis of the marginal efficiency of capital is consistent with th...
This article is a follow-up to the Capital Theory Controversy that took place in 1960s-70s. In broad...
Capital theory controversies and ‘paradoxes’ showed that, due to price-feedback effects, the wage-pr...
Capital theory and the associated with it price effects resulting from changes in the distributive v...
The relationships between the classical and neoclassical theories are much more complex that the neo...
This book deals with the Cambridge capital theory controversies both from a historical and from an a...
Neoclassical theory erroneously makes the assumption that firms maximise profits on a fixed endowmen...
This paper addresses the theoretical explanation of profit and interest within three different appro...
The purpose of this note is to supplement the author’s earlier remarks on the unsatisfactory nature ...
Although it might have been expected that, by this point in time, the unacceptability of the margina...
Although it might have been expected that, by this point in time, the unacceptability of the margina...
The equality between factor pay and marginal product is a major component of the neoclassical paradi...
The equality between factor pay and marginal product is a major component of the neoclassical paradi...
The paper addresses the ambiguity that surrounds the conception of capital and its role in neoclassi...
In the traditional versions of the neoclassical theory of value and distribution, the stock of exist...
This paper argues that Keynes’s analysis of the marginal efficiency of capital is consistent with th...
This article is a follow-up to the Capital Theory Controversy that took place in 1960s-70s. In broad...
Capital theory controversies and ‘paradoxes’ showed that, due to price-feedback effects, the wage-pr...
Capital theory and the associated with it price effects resulting from changes in the distributive v...
The relationships between the classical and neoclassical theories are much more complex that the neo...
This book deals with the Cambridge capital theory controversies both from a historical and from an a...
Neoclassical theory erroneously makes the assumption that firms maximise profits on a fixed endowmen...
This paper addresses the theoretical explanation of profit and interest within three different appro...