Business Cycles: A Theoretical, Historical, and Statistical Analysis of the Capitalist Process, Volume 1Martino Pub., 2006 - 1095 pagina's Schumpeter is without doubt one of the most influential economists of the 20th century. Business Cycles [1939] is considered his great work. We reprint the first edition published in 1939 in two volumes. In "Business Cycles" Schumpeter focuses powerfully on the historical role of technological innovation in accounting for the high degree of instability in capitalists societies. He aims to analyze empirically the actual process of economic development using historical and statistical material based on the theoretical framework he developed in earlier writings. He tried to integrate theory and history primarily by means of statistics. It is because he adopted the method of filling in the statistical contours with detailed industrial history that "Business Cycles" comprises two large volumes. A Classic work, not otherwise available in the original two volume format. |
Inhoudsopgave
PREFACE | 3 |
E The StateDirected Economy of Germany 19331938 971 | 23 |
PRICES AND QUANTITIES OF INDIVIDUAL COMMODITIES 520 | 38 |
Copyright | |
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actually analysis argument assumptions banks behavior business cycles business situations capital capitalist century commodities competition concept consumers cost course created credit creation crises curve cyclical process demand depression display disturbances economic process effects element England enterprise entrepreneurs evolution example existence expected external factors fact factors of production financing firms fluctuations formal methods fundamental German hence historical important increase individual industrial innovation instance investment Juglar Kitchins Kondratieff logical material matter means mechanism ment method monetary monopolistic competition movement nature nomic observe obvious old firms output particular perfect competition period periodogram phases phenomena possible practice present price level problem production functions Professor profits proposition prosperity purposes quantities railroad reader reason recession relation role saving schema sense simply social stationary process statistical theoretical theory things tion trade trend values variable variations Walrasian equilibrium wave writer