Economics : a new introduction.
Stretton's introductory level economics textbook provides a much-needed alternative to standard student texts. He argues that neoclassical economic theory is inadequate, and draws on elements of Keynesian, green and feminist thought.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
London :
Pluto,
1999.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Contents
- Introduction
- Acknowledgements
- Part One
- Studying Economics
- 1. What you can know, what you can�t know
- 2. Causes and effects (1) the need to select
- 3. Causes and effects (2) how to select
- 4. Explanations and equations
- 5. The controversial language of economics
- 6. Efficiency, welfare and the scope of economics
- 7. Skills and values you will need
- Part Two
- Economic Growth and Change
- 8. Understanding growth and change
- 9. Theories of economic growth
- 10. Institutional studies of economic development
- 11. Some economic historiesNEW DIRECTIONS
- 12. Changing modes of production and sources of income
- 13. Technology
- 14. Wants
- 15. Childhood
- 16. Threatened social capital
- 17. Threatened natural resources
- 18. The rich democracies now
- Part Three
- Demands for Goods and Services
- 19. Dual demands: for goods and services, and for modes of supply
- 20. How are wants and tastes formed?
- 21. How do prices, incomes and tastes influence demand?
- 22. The elasticity of demand
- Part Four
- The Productive Institutions
- 23. People as producersHOUSEHOLDS
- 24. Household histories
- 25. Household capital
- 26. Housing Policies
- 27. Households : a summary
- PRIVATE ENTERPRISES
- 28. Business powers
- 29. Theories about firms� purposes
- 30. How firms work
- 31. Costs of production : analysis
- 32. Costs of production: four ways to fix wages
- 33. Costs of production : how firms minimize their costs
- 34. How firms price their products
- 35. How firms invest
- 36. What private enterprises need from government :A shortest summary
- PUBLIC ENTERPRISES
- 37. Public growth38. Public efficiency
- 39. What public enterprises need from government
- Part Five
- The Distributive Institutions
- 40. Market theory
- 41. Market practice
- 42. Market examples
- WEALTH AND INCOME
- 43. The composition and distribution of wealth
- 44. The composition and distribution of income
- 45. Income policies
- 46. Taxation
- Part Six
- Economic Strategy
- 47. The parts and the whole
- 48. Economic structure
- 49. How free should trade be?
- 50. Money and banking : national
- 51. Money and banking : international52. Inflation
- 53. Employment
- 54. Global markets: Interactive effects of inadequately governed economic structure, trade, banking, exchange and employment
- NATIONAL STRATEGIES
- 56. A federal economy
- 57. Free-trading independence
- 58. Protected independence
- 59. Ex-Communist options
- 60. Democracy in a global economy
- Index