Elgar Companion to Hayekian Economics / by Roger W. Garrison and Norman Barry
Material type:
- 9781783475261
- 330.092 GAR
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Central Library | 330.092 GAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 000822 |
Tribute to Norman Barry
Martin Rickets
1. Introduction
Roger W. Garrison
2. Hayek in the History of Economic Thought
Denis O’Brien
3. Hayek and Economic Theory in the 1930s
Martin Ricketts
4. Hayek’s Pure Theory of Capital
Gerald R. Steele
5. Hayek and Keynes
Roger E. Backhouse
6. Hayek and Friedman
Roger W. Garrison
7. Hayek and Mises
Richard M. Ebeling
8. Hayek and Lachman
Peter Lewin
9. Hayek: From Economics as Equilibrium Analysis to Economics as Social Theory
Paul Lewis
10. Hayek and Spontaneous Order
Craig Smith
11. Hayek on Socialism
Mark Pennington
12. Hayek vs. the Neoclassicists: Lessons from the Socialist Calculation Debate
Peter J. Boettke, Christopher J. Coyne, Peter T. Leeson
13. Spontaneous Order, Free Trade and Globalization
Steven G. Horwitz
14. Hayek on Labor Unions
Charles W. Baird
15. Hayek on Economic Policy (the Austrian Road to the Third Way)
Enrico Colombato
16. What Remains of Hayek’s Critique of ‘Social Justice’? Twenty Propositions
Robert Nef
Index
The Elgar Companion to Hayekian Economics provides an in-depth treatment of Friedrich August von Hayek’s economic thought from his technical economics of the 1920s and 1930s to his broader views on the spontaneous order of a free society. Taken together, the chapters show evidence both of continuity of thought and of significant changes in focus.
Providing a thorough and balanced account of Hayek’s work, the authors examine his wide-ranging contribution to thought in the areas of business cycles, socialism and trade unions and the socialist calculation debate, as well as social justice, spontaneous order, globalization and free trade. The authors provide enlightening comparisons between Hayek’s views and those of Ludwig von Mises, Ludwig M. Lachmann, Milton Friedman and John Maynard Keynes.
Scholars working in the classical liberal tradition as well as academic economists and political scientists will find this in-depth account to be an invaluable resource. ---provided by publisher
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