A pluralistic introduction to macroeconomics: methodology, theory, and policy
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Cheltenham, UK ; Northampton, MA, USA
Edward Elgar
[2024]
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Beschreibung: | xvi, 499 Seiten Diagramme |
ISBN: | 9781035322350 9781035322336 |
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CONTENTS PART I A FIRST GLANCE AT OUR ECONOMIC SYSTEM Introduction to Part 1 2 Alternative Perspectives on the Economic System 4 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 A Still Photo of the Economy 1.1.1 The circular flow diagram 1.1.2 The simple circular flow between consumers and producers 1.1.3 Transfers within households 1.1.4 Adding a financial sector 1.1.5 Government in the circular flow 1.1.6 Economic interdependence and the accumulation of assets and debt 1.1.7 The circular flow diagram illustrates economic interdependence Let's Go to the Movies 1.2.1 The growth of population and production 1.2.2 A sharp acceleration after 1800 1.2.3 Further acceleration in the 20th century 1.2.4 GDP growth has been unequal and unsteady How the Sectors Change: Technology and Capital Accumulation 1.3.1 Technological change 1.3.2 Not all technological progress improves life 1.3.3 Accumulation and reproduction The Links that Hold the Economic System Together 1.4.1 Markets and the invisible hand 1.4.2 Not all the connections are markets 1.4.3 The many forms of economic interaction The Systemic Role of Institutions 1.5.1 Introducing institutions 1.5.2 Thorstein Veblen and the American Institutionalists 1.5.3 Institutions, not markets, are fundamental determinants of how people interact 1.5.4 The evolutionary nature of institutions Adding a Time Dimension: Materialist Dialectics 1.6.1 A brief history of dialectics 1.6.2 Structural change, reproduction, and accumulation 1.6.3 Conflicts between the economy, society, and nature Summary and Conclusions 6 6 7 9 9 11 12 13 13 14 17 17 18 19 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 25 26 27 28 29 30 30 31 31 32
A PLURALISTIC INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS 2 Measuring Production and Human Well-Being 2.1 Measuring the Economy: GDP 2.1.1 The history of GDP 2.1.2 Revealing the ideological bias of GDP 2.1.3 The mathematical representation of GDP 2.1.4 GDP, GNP, and GNI 2.1.5 GDP omits household production and informal production 42 2.1.6 Counting the bads as well as the goods 2.1.7 Adjusting for price differences over time and space 2.2 Is There a Better Measure of Human Well-Being? 2.2.1 Adding in the value of leisure, home production, and volunteer work 45 2.2.2 Lifetime measures versus annual measures 2.2,3 Life expectancy and life's order 2.2.4 Accounting for the quality and variety of production 2.3 The United Nations' Human Development Index 2.4 Defining Happiness and Explaining Human Behavior 2.4.1 Philosophers'take on happiness 2.4.2 What can psychologists tell us about happiness? 2.4.3 What biology and neuroscience tells us about happiness 54 2.4.4 Neuroscientific evidence on human behavior 2.4.5 The human brain, free will, and happiness 2.5 Happiness Studies 2.5.1 Country survey data 2.5.2 Cross-section surveys 2.5.3 Summarizing the country happiness data 2.5.4 Statistical regression studies of happiness 2.6 Net Domestic Product(NDP): Accounting for Reproduction 2.6.1 Economic reproduction 2.6.2 Reproducing the ecosystem 2.6.3 Social reproduction 2.6.4 Net domestic product (NDP) 2.7 Conclusions and Looking Forward 37 37 39 39 41 42 3 People and Households 3.1 Population and household growth 3.1.1 Alternative views of population growth 3.1.2 The mechanics of demographic change
3.1.3 The demographic transition 3.1.4 What drives the demographic transition, and where will it end? 79 72 73 74 75 76 43 44 44 47 48 48 49 50 52 53 56 59 60 61 62 63 63 64 65 65 66 67 67
CONTENTS 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 The Short-Run Effects of Shifts in Population Growth 3.2.1 The population profile 3.2.2 The dependency ratio 3.2.3 The economic impact of the population profile Introduction to Human Capital 3.3.1 The concept of capital 3.3.2 The many forms of human capital 3.3.3 Accumulating knowledge Formal Education 3.4.1 Adam Smith on education 3.4.2 Why private education falls short of social needs 3.4.3 Education in the economic and social spheres Social Capital 3.5.1 Getting along in society 3.5.2 Culture 3.5.3 Bourdieu's field, doxa, and habitus 3.5.4 Cultural capital Summary, Conclusions, and Conjectures about the Future 4 Production and the Business Firm 4.1 Production in a Capitalist Economy 4.1.1 The motives of the business firm 4.1.2 Types of private business firms 4.2 Corporations 4.2.1 The key features of the corporation 4.2.2 Control of the corporation 4.2.3 Corporate bonds and other forms of borrowing 4.3 Thorstein Veblen's Three Separations 4.3.1 The machine process 4.3.2 The first separation: Product standardization 4.3.3 The second separation: Focus on profit, not production 4.3.4 The third degree of separation: Advertising, lobbying, and other wastes 4.3.5 Business concentration and corporate power 4.4 Technology and Technological Change 4.4.1 Introduction to technology and technological change 4.4.2 The characteristics of technological change 4.4.3 The slow dissemination of technology 4.4.4 Case Study: The use of electricity in manufacturing 4.4.5 The geographic diffusion of technology is also slow 4.4.6 Technological change as a
combinatoric process 4.4.7 Patents and copyrights . 79 80 82 84 85 85 85 86 87 87 88 89 91 92 93 94 95 96 100 100 101 101 103 104 105 106 107 107 108 109 110 111 113 113 115 116 117 118 119 121
A PLURALISTIC INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS 4.5 4.6 Technological Change, Economic Growth, and Structural Change 4.5.1 Patterns of structural change 4.5.2 The costs of structural change Production and Technology: A Summary 5 The Roles of Government in the Economy 5.1 Governance: Managing Large Social and Economic Systems . 5.1.1 Dealing with strangers 5.1.2 Government as an institution for collective action 5.2 Adam Smith's Three Roles for Government 5.2.1 Adam Smith's Basic Functions of Government 5.3 Additional Economic Roles for Government 5.3.T Externalities 5.3.2 ‘Externalities and the complexity of human well-being 5.3.3 Achieving a more just distribution of society's production 5.3.4 Dealing with the inefficiency of imperfectly competitive markets 5.3.5 Macroeconomic stability 5.3.6 Government leadership in changing the institutional structure 5.3.7 The economic.foundation of human rights 5.4 Government and Capitalism: Protecting Private Property 5.4.1 Defining ownership and private property 5.4.2 John Locke's justification of private property 5.4.3 Contrasting Locke's property with capitalism'sabsolute property 5.5 Intellectual Property Rights 5.5.1 History of intellectual property rights 5.5.2 The patent as a property right to an idea 5.5.3 International protection of intellectual property rights 5.5.4 Should people or corporations be able to own ideas and knowledge? 5.5.5 Intellectual property rights in Western society 5.6 The Evolving Roles of Government in our Capitalist Economy 5.6.1 Accumulation, income inequality, and alienation 5.6.2 The illusion of markets
and the popular culture of capitalism 5.6.3 Is the United States a democracy? 5.7 Conclusions and Some Observations 5.7.1 Government is indispensable 5.7.2 Power corrupts 5.7.3 Back to the goose and the common 122 122 123 124 129 130 130 131 132 132 134 134 135 137 138 139 140 140 143 144 144 146 147 147 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 156 156 157 158 159
CONTENTS 6 Money and the Financial Sector of the Economy 6.1 Introduction to Finance 6.1.1 The long history of finance 6.2 Finance and its Relationship to Money 6.2.1 The roles that money has played throughout history 6.2.2 Money must be a trusted store of value 6.2.3 Money has taken on many different forms throughout history 6.2.4 The rise and fall of commodity money 6.2.5 The emergence of bank money 6.2.6 Seignorage 6.3 How Institutions Support Modern Money 6.3.1 The Federal Reserve Bank 6.3.2 Bank money 6.3.3 Institutional support of bank money 6.3.4 What limits banks' money creation? 6.3.5 Money: A summary 6.4 The Orthodox Model of Finance 6.4.1 The loanable funds market 6.4.2 Extending the analysis to the whole economy 6.4.3 How realistic is the loanable funds model? 6.4.4 The possibility of default 6.4.5 Risk pooling 6.4.6 Adverse selection 6.4.7 Moral hazard 6.4.8 Government regulation 6.5 A Case Study of Modern Finance: The 2007-2009 Financial Crisis 6.5.1 Taking advantage of financial deregulation 6.5.2 Taking advantage of financial innovation 6.5.3 Don't worry, we are insured! 6.5.4 Assessing the deregulation and financial innovation 6.5.5 The Fed and the great monetary expansion 6.5.6 From financial crisis to global recession 6.5.7 Was this corruption? 6.6 Lessons Learned and Lessons Ignored PART II 164 165 165 166 167 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 179 179 180 181 182 182 183 184 185 186 186 187 188 189 191 192 193 195 MACROECONOMIC MODELS Introduction to Part II 7 Macroeconomic Modeling 7.1 The Scientific Method 7.1.1 The implications of the
scientific method 7.1.2 Is there a social scientific method? 7.1.3 Evolutionary processes and systems theory 200 201 202 202 203 204
A PLURALISTIC INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS Materialist Dialectics: A Scientific Approach to Complex Systems 7.2.1 Hegelian dialectics 7.2.2 Materialist dialectics 7.2.3 The insights provided by materialist dialectics 7.2.4 Engels' three laws of dialectics 7,2.5 Dialectics requires the rejection of deductive reasoning Economic Models 7.3.1 The human brain's preference for patterns 7.3.2 A scientific approach to modeling in economics 7.3.3 A fundamental problem for modeling: Culture 7.3.4 More problems: Personal interest and unequal power Conclusions and Some Further Observations 7.4.1 ' Can the economist be truly objective? 7.4.2 ‘Economic methodology and public trust 7.4.3 The inevitable compromises in macroeconomic modeling 205 206 206 207 208 210 211 212 212 215 216 216 217 218 219 The Classical Macroeconomic Model 8.1 Pre-Capitalist Economic Thought 8.1.1 Mercantilism 8.1.2 Post Mercantilism: Pierre Le Pesant de Boisguilbert 8.1.3 Adam Smith 8.2 Thomas Malthus and Economic Stagnation Malthus' population function 8.2.1 8.2.2 The Classical production function and diminishing returns 8.2.3 The Malthusian equilibrium 8.2.4 An evaluation of Malthus' population model 8.3 The Basic Classical Macroeconomic Model 8.3.1 The fixed supply side of the economy 8.3.2 The loanable funds market and Say's Law 8.3.3 The quantity equation and the general price level 8.3.4 Summarizing the Classical model: Key conclusions 8.4 Assessing the Legacy of the Classical Model 8.4.1 Classical economic thought and the distribution of income 8.4.2 Were Classical economists less enlightened than other
social thinkers? 8.5 Emergence of the Neoclassical School of Economic Thought 8.5.1 Léon Walras 8.5.2 The Walrasian system 8.5.3 The incredible Walrasian auctioneer 8.5.4 Marginal product as a measure of value 8.5.5 Making sense of the Walrasian nonsense 8.5.6 Some further thoughts on the Classical/Neoclassical model 223 224 224 226 227 228 229 7.2 7.3 7.4 230 232 232 234 234 235 237 239 241 241 243 244 244 245 246 247 248 249
CONTENTS 9 The Marxian Macroeconomic Model 9.1 Early 19th-Century Socialist Economists 9.1.1 Diversity and disagreement among socialist reformers 9.1.2 But they agreed on many things 9.1.3 Enter Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels 9.2 Marx's Methodology 9.2.1 Dialectics 9.2.2 The importance of history 9.2.3 Marx's focus on the accumulation processes 9.2.4 Financial leverage and industrial concentration 9.2.5 Marx's three concepts of value 9.3 Marx's Circuits of Capital 9.3.1 The circuit of industrial capital 9.3.2 Competition among capitalists drives the pursuitof surplus 9.3.3 Marx's systemic explanation of unemployment 9.4 There are Many Interrelated Circuits ofCapital 9.4.1 The circuit of fixed capital 9.4.2 Social reproduction and the circuit of social capital 9.4.3 The circuit of natural capital 9.5 International Circuits of Capital 9.5.1 Imperialism and colonialism 9.5.2 Imperialism as the solution to over-production in capitalist societies 9.5.3 Hobson's description of over-production 9.5.4 Rosa Luxemburg's dialectics 9.6 Summarizing the Marxian Model 9.7 Some Further Thoughts on the Marxian Model 253 254 254 256 257 258 258 259 261 261 262 262 263 265 266 267 267 268 270 271 272 10 The Keynesian Model 10.1 Keynes'Macroeconomic Model 10.1.1 Keynes'systems approach 10.1.2 The fallacy of composition 10.1.3 The essence of Keynes'macroeconomic model 10.2 The Consumption Function 10.2.1 Keynes'linear consumption function 10.2.2 The rationale behind the consumptionfunction 10.2.3 Does the rate of saving rise with income? 10.3 Investment 10.3.1 The marginal efficiency of
investment (MEI) 10.3.2 What determines the marginal efficiency of capital? 10.3.3 Technological change and the marginal efficiency of capital 10.3.4 Expectations and uncertainty 10.4.5 Adding investment to the Keyne.sian cross diagram 282 283 284 285 285 286 287 288 290 292 292 294 294 295 296 273 274 275 276 278
A PLURALISTIC INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS 10.4 Government demand for goods and services 10.5 Equilibrium in the Keynesian model 10.5.1 Keynesian aggregate demand 10.5.2 The Keynesian equilibrium 10.5.3 An alternative representation of the Keynesian equilibrium 10.5.4 Returning the economy to full employment 10.5.5 Inflationary is also possible 10.6 The Multiplier 10.6.1 A simple example 10.6.2 A diagrammatic example of the multiplier 10.6.3 Balanced budget multiplier 10.6.4 How large is the multiplier in the US economy? 10.6.5 The paradox of thrift 10.6.6 The investment accelerator 1Ό.7 Conclusions 10.7.1 Further comparisons between Keynes and Marx 10.7.2 Next up: Macroeconomic policy PART III 11 297 298 298 298 300 301 301 303 303 304 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 MACROECONOMIC POLICY Introduction to Part III 316 Keynesian Macroeconomic Policy 318 Fiscal Policy 11.1.1 The COVID-19 fiscal expansion 11.1.2 The details of the six bills 11.1.3 Funding the COVID-19 expenditures 11.1.4 The many types and intensities of taxation 11.1.5 The many types of government expenditure 11.1.6 Summary 11.2 Monetary Policy 11.2.1 How money affects aggregate demand 11.2.2 Keynesian monetary mechanism 11.2.3 Modern money theory (Μ MT) 11.2.4 Monetary policy according to MMT 11.3 Coordinating Fiscal and Monetary Policy 11.3.1 Abba Lerner's functional finance 11.3.2 Coronavirus relief payments were a fiscal/monetary combination 11.3.3 The politics of macroeconomic policy 11.4 Government Regulation: The Third Policy Option 11.4.1 The Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 11.4.2 Deposit insurance 319 320
321 324 325 327 328 328 328 330 331 332 334 334 11.1 336 337 337 337 338
CONTENTS 11.4.3 The success of regulatory policy 339 11.4.4 Absentee ownership and Keynes'financial tax 340 11.5 Some Reflections on Keynesian Macroeconomic Policy 342 11.5.1 Keynes was not a radical 342 11.5.2 Eventually most economists rejected the Keynesian model 343 11.5.3 Keynes'failure to grasp the power of the capitalist elite 344 12 Inequality and Instability: A Post Keynesian Response 12.1 The Post Keynesian Reply to the Neoclassical Resurgence 12.1.1 The false equivalence of risk and uncertainty 12.1.2 How do people actually determine their expectations? 12.1.3 Some further implications of Keynes' understanding of human rationality 12.2 Minsky's Financial Instability Hypothesis 12.2.1 Minsky's three categories of finance 12.2.2 Minsky's financial instability hypothesis 12.3 Dealing with Short-Term Macroeconomic Instability 12.3.1 Automatic stabilizers 12.3.2 The government as Employer of Last Resort (ELR) 12.3.3 ELR can target production 12.3.4 The advantages and disadvantages of targeting work 12.3.5 The costs of ELR 12.4 Economic Inequality 12.4.1 Measuring income inequality 12.4.2 The distribution of wealth 12.4.3 What is the most desirable distribution of income? 12.4.4 John Rawls' Veil of Ignorance 12.4.5 Territoriality and the endowmenteffect 12.5 Can Universal Basic Income Eliminate Poverty? 12.5.1 UBI payments as a share of GDP 12.5.2 Employer of last resort vs. universalbasic income 12.6 Conclusions and Remaining Issues 12.6.1 Post Keynesian contributions 12.6.2 Looking toward a more distant future 348 349 349 349 13 Macroeconomic Policy and Our Ecosystem
13.1 Economic Production and its Effect on the Ecosystem 13.1.1 Nature's limited capacity to provide 13.1.2 Laws of thermodynamics and nature's diminishing capacity 377 13.1.3 Profit-driven technological change seldom reduces the human footprint on Earth 378 13.1.4 The Jevons effect . 374 376 376 351 352 352 353 355 356 357 359 359 360 360 360 362 363 364 365 366 366 367 368 368 368 379
A PLURALISTIC INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS 13.1.5 13.1.6 13.2 How Do 13.2.1 The Lauderdale paradox Ecological rifts We Avoid an Ecological Catastrophe? Delayed reactions and uncertainty within a slow-moving system 13.2.2 We are not doing enough 13.3 A Keynesian Macroeconomic Approach to the Environment 13.3.1 Identifying low throughput activities 13.3.2 Shifting-consumption toward leisure by reducing work hours 13.3.3 ELR can help 13.3.4 Green new deals 13.3.5- Décroissance (regrowth) 13.3.6 The precautionary principle and flexibility 13.3.7 Net domestic product (NDP) 13.4 Summary and Conclusions 13.4.1 Macroeconomic policy must adapt to the new circumstances 13.4.2 The long-term cost of ecological destruction PART IV 380 381 382 382 383 384 384 385 386 387 388 390 390 391 391 391 EXTENSIONS OF MACROECONOMICS Introduction to Part IV 14 The Open Macroeconomy 14.1 Extending the Circular Flow Across the Border 14.1.1 Exports and imports 14.1.2 Outsourcing, vertical specialization, and international trade 14.1.3 International finance 14.1.4 International transfers 14.1.5 Summarizing foreign transactions 14.2 A Country's Balance of Payments 14.2.1 The accounting rules of the BoP 14.2.2 The balance of payments of the United States 14.2.3 The net investment position of the United States 14.3 The Keynesian Model for an Open Economy 14.3.1 Opening the product market to international trade 14.3.2 Macro policies in an open economy 14.3.3 Three balances 14.3.4 The exchange rate as a macroeconomic tool 14.3.5 Direct interference in foreign trade as a macroeconomic tool 417 399 400 401
402 403 404 405 405 406 407 408 410 411 412 413 414 416
CONTENTS 14.4 14.5 14.6 14.7 14.3.6 The United States'history of protectionism Trade and Development: A Case Study of Brazil 14.4.1 The initial colonization of Brazil 14.4.2 The sugar cycle 14.4.3 The gold cycle 14.4.4 Brazil's political independence 14.4.5 The coffee cycle 14.4.6 Brazil in the 1930s depression Import Substitution Industrialization (ISI) 14.5.1 Dependency theory 14.5.2 Prebisch and ECLA 14.5.3 Assessing import substitution policies Transnational Corporations 14.6.1 TNCs and global monopoly capitalism 14.6.2 Investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) procedures 14.6.3 Antonio Gramsci, democracy, and TNCs Summary, Remarks, and Some Dialectic Visions 15 Economic Growth and Economic Change 15.1 Economic Growth: Definitions and Concepts 15.1.1 Economic growth vs. economic development 15.1.2 The power of compounding 15.2 Schumpeter's Model of Technological Change 15.2.1 Joseph Schumpeter, a radical embraced by the mainstream 15.2.2 ' The particulars of Schumpeter's model 15.2.3 Creative destruction and the entrepreneur 15.2.4 Romer's Schumpeterian mathematical growth model 15.2.5 The resource cost of innovation 15.2.6 The efficiency of R D activity 15.2.7 A faster rate of innovation reduces the total benefits of each innovation 15.2.8 The equilibrium rate of technological progress 15.2.9 The dialectics of technological change 15.2.10 The political economy of creative destruction 15.3 Technology and Growth in a Keynesian Framework 15.3.1 Tarshis' dynamic extensions of the Keynesian model 15.3.2 The dynamics of innovation and unemployment 15.4 The Harrod Growth Model
15.4.1 The economy's growth path 15.4.2 Harrod's model of balanced growth 15.4.3 The natural growth path 15.4.4 The dialectics of the Harrod model 418 419 419 420 421 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 428 430 431 432 437 438 439 439 442 443 444 445 446 447 447 449 449 450 451 452 452 453 455 455 456 458 459
A PLURALISTIC INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS 15.4.5 The case for constant vigilance and policy flexibility 15.4.6 Summarizing Harrod's model 15.5 Contrasting our Models 15.5.1 Is a revolution inevitable? 15.5.2 Schumpeter's change of mind 15.5.3 Keynes'views on economic growth 15.5.4 Which model bestpredicts our future? References Index 460 462 463 464 464 465 467 471 483 |
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discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content |
genre_facet | Lehrbuch |
id | DE-604.BV049579960 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-03T23:31:58Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-20T07:43:11Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781035322350 9781035322336 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-034924900 |
oclc_num | 1434128786 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-11 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-739 DE-945 DE-706 |
owner_facet | DE-11 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-739 DE-945 DE-706 |
physical | xvi, 499 Seiten Diagramme |
publishDate | 2024 |
publishDateSearch | 2024 |
publishDateSort | 2024 |
publisher | Edward Elgar |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Van den Berg, Hendrik 1949- Verfasser (DE-588)124991505 aut A pluralistic introduction to macroeconomics methodology, theory, and policy Hendrik Van den Berg Cheltenham, UK ; Northampton, MA, USA Edward Elgar [2024] © 2024 xvi, 499 Seiten Diagramme txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Makroökonomie (DE-588)4037174-8 gnd rswk-swf Heterodoxe Ökonomie (DE-588)1112289534 gnd rswk-swf Klassische Nationalökonomie (DE-588)4128353-3 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Makroökonomie (DE-588)4037174-8 s Klassische Nationalökonomie (DE-588)4128353-3 s Heterodoxe Ökonomie (DE-588)1112289534 s b DE-604 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-1-0353-2234-3 Digitalisierung UB Regensburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034924900&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Van den Berg, Hendrik 1949- A pluralistic introduction to macroeconomics methodology, theory, and policy Makroökonomie (DE-588)4037174-8 gnd Heterodoxe Ökonomie (DE-588)1112289534 gnd Klassische Nationalökonomie (DE-588)4128353-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4037174-8 (DE-588)1112289534 (DE-588)4128353-3 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | A pluralistic introduction to macroeconomics methodology, theory, and policy |
title_auth | A pluralistic introduction to macroeconomics methodology, theory, and policy |
title_exact_search | A pluralistic introduction to macroeconomics methodology, theory, and policy |
title_exact_search_txtP | A pluralistic introduction to macroeconomics methodology, theory, and policy |
title_full | A pluralistic introduction to macroeconomics methodology, theory, and policy Hendrik Van den Berg |
title_fullStr | A pluralistic introduction to macroeconomics methodology, theory, and policy Hendrik Van den Berg |
title_full_unstemmed | A pluralistic introduction to macroeconomics methodology, theory, and policy Hendrik Van den Berg |
title_short | A pluralistic introduction to macroeconomics |
title_sort | a pluralistic introduction to macroeconomics methodology theory and policy |
title_sub | methodology, theory, and policy |
topic | Makroökonomie (DE-588)4037174-8 gnd Heterodoxe Ökonomie (DE-588)1112289534 gnd Klassische Nationalökonomie (DE-588)4128353-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Makroökonomie Heterodoxe Ökonomie Klassische Nationalökonomie Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034924900&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT vandenberghendrik apluralisticintroductiontomacroeconomicsmethodologytheoryandpolicy |