経済思想史における人口、開発と福祉<br>Population, Development and Welfare in the History of Economic Thought (Routledge Studies in the History of Economics)

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経済思想史における人口、開発と福祉
Population, Development and Welfare in the History of Economic Thought (Routledge Studies in the History of Economics)

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 256 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780415362788
  • DDC分類 330.01

基本説明

Charts the history of this most important of topics - from the Mercantilist era until the present day - in which the writings of Malthus, Wicksell, Pareto and Keynes are key.

Full Description

The relation between demographic phenomena and economic development is a complex one and has changed throughout time; today the relationship is still unclear and the effects of population growth on development and social welfare are still a matter of debate. In this book, Claudia Sunna examines how this relationship has been considered in the history of economic thought, from Mercantilism to the beginning of the 20th century, demonstrating how it has been a common feature in Mercantilist, Classical, Marginalist, Neoclassical and Keynesian paradigms.

Sunna argues that the ideas of marginalist authors on population and development in particular mainly went beyond the analytical frame of economic theory due to the fact that in the static model that they developed, population was an exogenous variable. Sunna considers such economists as Wicksell and Pareto with their theory of the “optimum populationâ€, or Marshall with his theory of long period growth who tried to consider the population variable in the new analytical frame. Others, like Jevons, Walras, Edgeworth, Sidgwick, dealt with this subject in non-analytical works. Sunna argues that all were influenced by the classical scheme and that even Keynes, up to the end of the Twenties, used a classical way of reasoning in order to explain unemployment as a demographic phenomenon.

This book will be of interest to student and researchers in history of population theory and economics development, as well as those adopting an interdisciplinary approach to demography and sociology.

Contents

1. Population Theories in Mercantilist Thought 2. A. Smith on Population, Wages and Economic Development 3. T.R. Malthus on Population from the Essay to the Principles 4. Classical Economists: Toward the Stationary State 5. The Critique of the 'Law of Population' 6. Population in Marginalist and Neoclassical thought 7. K. Wicksell: From the 'Optimum of Population' to the Steady Growth Path 8. V. Pareto and the 'Popolazione Ottima' 9. J.M. Keynes on Population, Unemployment and Economic Development 10. 'Stagnation Theories' and the Fear of Zero Population Growth 11. Population Theories in Development Economics 12. The Theory of Demographic Transition

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