Post-Walrasian economics is the result of a conver- gence between heterodox schools, such as new institutionalism, new Keynesian economics and radical political economics. The debate on power develops mainly within this methodological framework. Liberals and radicals have confronted each other harshly about the nature of power in capitalism, but their common method leads to the same mysti ed conception. Marx discussed the class nature of competition and explained how social coercion and individual freedom coexist in capitalism. Post-Walrasians represent competition as the highest expression of individual freedom and characterize power as its negation. Reality is thus turned upside- down, as in old vulgar economics: the power relation suffer...
In this article, I review Marxist writing on ‘the market’, highlighting two different lines of criti...
business and industry capital accumulation capitalization capitalism class data differential accumul...
This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in New Political Economy, 18(3), 431...
In the economic debate on power, seemingly opposite positions have been presented. Contractualists h...
It is widely believed that the failure of the socialist experiment should have had a devastating eff...
Two basic tenets of theWalrasian model, behavior based on self-interested exogenous preferences and ...
This text comprises chapter 1 of Marx and non-equilibrium Economics[1]. It specifies a non-equilibr...
Following renewed interest in Marx?s political economy in the wake of the financial crisis, the pape...
From the 1930s, economic controversy has been a tale of three cities (Chicago and the two Cambridges...
This article, presented to the Annual Conference of the History of Economics Society, Vancouver July...
Lukes’ Power:A RadicalView is a milestone in the debate on power. First, it criticises the narrow co...
If there still is a hegemony of postmodernism in today’s leftist academia, and if it can be analysed...
This article updates the paper ‘Mr Marx and the Neoclassics’ presented at the July 1996 conference o...
While the majority of the scientific community holds Marxian Value and Price Theory to be internally...
Competition is taken for granted by neoclassical economics: its cause is human nature and its functi...
In this article, I review Marxist writing on ‘the market’, highlighting two different lines of criti...
business and industry capital accumulation capitalization capitalism class data differential accumul...
This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in New Political Economy, 18(3), 431...
In the economic debate on power, seemingly opposite positions have been presented. Contractualists h...
It is widely believed that the failure of the socialist experiment should have had a devastating eff...
Two basic tenets of theWalrasian model, behavior based on self-interested exogenous preferences and ...
This text comprises chapter 1 of Marx and non-equilibrium Economics[1]. It specifies a non-equilibr...
Following renewed interest in Marx?s political economy in the wake of the financial crisis, the pape...
From the 1930s, economic controversy has been a tale of three cities (Chicago and the two Cambridges...
This article, presented to the Annual Conference of the History of Economics Society, Vancouver July...
Lukes’ Power:A RadicalView is a milestone in the debate on power. First, it criticises the narrow co...
If there still is a hegemony of postmodernism in today’s leftist academia, and if it can be analysed...
This article updates the paper ‘Mr Marx and the Neoclassics’ presented at the July 1996 conference o...
While the majority of the scientific community holds Marxian Value and Price Theory to be internally...
Competition is taken for granted by neoclassical economics: its cause is human nature and its functi...
In this article, I review Marxist writing on ‘the market’, highlighting two different lines of criti...
business and industry capital accumulation capitalization capitalism class data differential accumul...
This is an Author's Accepted Manuscript of an article published in New Political Economy, 18(3), 431...