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These volumes gather together a selection of autobiographical essays written by significant economists whose work is generally recognized to be at the forefront of the discipline as we enter the twenty-first century. The essays are largely based on introductions to volumes in the Edward Elgar...
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Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- 1. Introduction -- Part I: Theory -- 2. Consumption: The Welfare of the Representative Consumer -- 3. Consumption: The Welfare of the Community -- 4. Consumption: The Productive Capacity of the Economy -- 5. Investment -- 6. Depreciation -- 7....
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A distribution of income between rulers and subjects can be derived as an equilibrium of violence, rather than from considerations of marginal products of owned factors of production. Society is organized in ranks, and the occupants of each rank are provided with incomes just sufficient that...
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Written over a span of 30 years, the essays in these volumes make significant contributions to the study of national accounting, demand theory, capital theory, public finance, the Canadian constitution, the subsidization of investment, equity and predatory behaviour.
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A dynastic cycle is a periodic alternation of society between despotism and anarchy. In a society of farmers, rulers, and bandits, population growth simultaneously impoverishes farmers and reduces the ruler's surplus per head. Society evolves into a despotic stationary state or into a dynastic...
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This article is a proof and critique of the theorem in its title. The marginal cost of public funds is the relative price of dollars in the hands of the government, with dollars in the hands of the public as the numeraire. It is the appropriate mark-up of benefit over cost for public sector...
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