Search results for "jel:B1"

showing 10 items of 11 documents

John Bates Clark on trusts: New light from the Columbia archives

2005

Public concern over the so called “trust problem” in the United States between the end of the nineteenth century and 1914, the year of the passage of the Clayton and Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Acts, was reflected in the considerable contemporary literature on the subject. Not surprisingly, professional economists actively participated in this debate. Their thinking directly and indirectly influenced the legislation of 1914 in a way that cannot be said of the Sherman Act of 1890 (Mayhew 1998). A survey of the most important of these professional writings shows that, among the several voices animating the discussion, John Bates Clark's was perhaps the most influential. In this connection,…

Policy makingjel:B31General Arts and HumanitiesAntitrust Predatory pricing PredationSubject (philosophy)Public concernBATESjel:B13LegislationCommissionNewspaperHistory and Philosophy of ScienceLawEconomicsGeneral Economics Econometrics and FinanceExposition (narrative)
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L'analyse de la monnaie et de la finance par David Hume : conventions, promesses, régulations

2008

De l’apport de David Hume a l’analyse economique, un aspect est generalement retenu : son approche presumee quantitative de la monnaie. Or, lorsqu’on resitue l’examen des relations monetaires et financieres a l’interieur de son corpus philosophique, il revele d’autres perspectives. Selon Hume, le processus de civilisation institue certaines fictions, qui permettent aux individus de forger un ordre symbolique. Dans une economie de marche, la distinction entre la monnaie – de nature conventionnelle – et les engagements financiers – assimiles a des promesses – est centrale. Alors que les conventions monetaires autorisent de multiples agencements, les engagements financiers doivent etre etroite…

jel:E50David Humejel:N23monnaiefinance[ SHS.ECO ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economies and financesjel:G20jel:B12jel:E42[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance[SHS.ECO] Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceGeneral Economics Econometrics and Financejel:G10
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BETWEEN PROGRESSIVISM AND INSTITUTIONALISM: ALBERT BENEDICT WOLFE ON EUGENICS

2013

Albeit concerned with the biological element in social evolution, Albert B. Wolfe was among the very few economists of the progressive era who openly expressed his concerns about certain implications of eugenic rhetoric for the social science. Specifically, Wolfe questioned the strong hereditary boundaries that more extreme eugenicists suggested about human beings. As I will attempt to show in paper, a careful examination of Wolfe’s writings reveals that his reaction was rooted in the belief that many of the social problems which eugenicists attributed to hereditary limitations, were actually imputable to the influence that the social, economic, and physical environment exercised on the ind…

ProgressivismEugenicsGeneral Arts and Humanitiesmedia_common.quotation_subjectEnvironmental ethicsCriminologySocial issuesEugenics; Institutionalism; Social Evolution; Progressivism; Wolfe Albert Benedictjel:B15History and Philosophy of ScienceSettore SECS-P/04 - Storia Del Pensiero EconomicoInstitutionalismEugenicsRhetoricEconomicsjel:B1Progressive eraElement (criminal law)Social evolutionGeneral Economics Econometrics and Financemedia_common
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The Classical Notion of Competition Revisited

2013

This article seeks to fill a lacuna within classical economics concerning the process of market price determination in situations of market disequilibrium. To this aim, first we distinguish the classical notion of free competition from the Walrasian notion of perfect competition and we argue that the latter is beset with some theoretical difficulties alien to the former. Second, we reconstruct in some detail Smith’s and Marx’s views concerning market price determination and show that Marx’s extensive use of metaphors and numerical examples foreshadows the modern taxonomy of buyers’ market, sellers’ market, and mixed strategy equilibrium in the capacity space of a standard Bertrand duopoly m…

Economics and EconometricsHistoryjel:B12Neoclassical economicsSpace (commercial competition)Classical and neoclassical notions of competition Adam Smith Karl Marx mixed strategies.Classical Economics Competition Adam Smith Karl Marx mixed strategiesjel:L11OligopolyCompetition (economics)StrategyTaxonomy (general)Bertrand competitionMarket priceEconomicsPerfect competitionSettore SECS-P/01 - Economia PoliticaClassical and Neoclassical notion of competition Smith Marx BertrandMathematical economicsHistory of Political Economy
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Adam Smith and the family

2008

This paper examines Adam Smith’s vision of family life and the role of the family in society as it stems from the Theory of Moral Sentiments. We first discuss textual evidences of Smith’s vision of gender differences and of the relationships between the sexes. Then we turn to TMS’s analysis of marriage and family life, exploring the importance of sentiments in strengthening family bonds and in fostering individuals’ moral education. Then we enlarge our perspective, considering Smith’s view on the role of the family within society, especially as market and non market relationships are concerned. Finally, we focus on Smith’s vision of the possible threats which life in Commercial societies ma…

Education.jel:B31Settore SECS-P/04 - Storia Del Pensiero EconomicoMoral Philosophyjel:J16GenderFamilyjel:A13jel:B12Adam Smith; Moral Philosophy; Family; Gender; Education.Adam Smithjel:I20
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TWO WAYS TO INTERPRET THE WORLD - TH. R. MALTHUS AND "L ABBE PIERRE"

2013

human destiny classical school economic thoughtjel:B15Revista Economica
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The Influence of American Economists on the Clayton and Federal Trade Commission Acts

2011

The aim of this paper is to analyze American economists’ influence in the passing of the Clayton and Federal Trade Commission Acts (1914). Specifically, it is argued and documented that American economists were important in this process in two ways. Many economists exercised an “indirect” influence by discussing in academic journals and books problems concerning trusts, combinations, and the necessary measures to preserve the working of competitive markets. At least as importantly, if not more so, some economists took an active role in the reform movement both contributing to draft proposals for the amendment of existing antitrust legislation and providing help and advice during the Congres…

Antitrustjel:K21jel:L42Settore SECS-P/04 - Storia Del Pensiero Economicojel:B13Clayton Actjel:B14Federal Trade Commissionjel:L41jel:B15
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Anti-Semitism and Progressive Era Social Science. The case of John R. Commons

2016

This paper explores Common’s views toward Jews in order to assess whether his published writings contain assertion that today would be stigmatized as anti-Semitic. The evidence we provide shows that Commons’ racial characterization of Jews was framed within a broad and indiscriminate xenophobic framework. With other leading Progressive Era social scientists, in fact, Commons shared the idea that the new immigration from Eastern and southern Europe would increase competition in the labor market, drive down wages, and lead Anglo-Saxon men and women to have fewer children, since they would not want them to compete with those who survive on less. Within this general xenophobic context, Commons …

060106 history of social sciencesmedia_common.quotation_subjectImmigrationContext (language use)Competition (economics)Progressivism Anti-semitismHistory and Philosophy of ScienceOrder (exchange)0502 economics and businessEconomics0601 history and archaeology050207 economicsSocial scienceSettore SECS-P/04 - STORIA DEL PENSIERO ECONOMICOmedia_commonCommons J. RPovertyGeneral Arts and Humanities05 social sciencesCommons john RCommons John Roger; Anti-Semitism; Race; ImmigrationAnti-Semitism06 humanities and the artsjel:B15MercantilismPolitical economyUnemploymentjel:B1CommonsGeneral Economics Econometrics and Finance
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Adam Smith on Monopoly Theory. Making good a lacuna

2014

This article analyses Adam Smith's views on monopoly by focusing on Book IV and V of The Wealth of Nations. It argues that the majority of scholars have assessed Smith's analysis of monopoly starting from premises different from those, actually though implicitly, used by Smith. We show that Smith makes use of the word 'monopoly' to refer to a heterogeneous collection of market outcomes, besides that of a single seller market, and that Smith's account of monopolists' behaviour is richer than that provided by later theorists. We also show that Smith was aware of the growth-retarding effect of monopoly and urged State regulation. © 2014 Scottish Economic Society.

Economics and EconometricsCompetition; Monopoly; Classical Economics; Adam SmithSociology and Political Sciencejel:B31Adam Smith Monopoly RegulationSubject (philosophy)jel:D42jel:B12Neoclassical economicsAdam smithjel:L51jel:L41Competition (economics)medicine.anatomical_structureEconomicsmedicineClassical economicsSettore SECS-P/01 - Economia PoliticaMonopolyLacunaScottish Journal of Political Economy
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Economic utopia of the Torah. Economic concepts of the Hebrew Bible interpreted according to the Rabbinical Literature

2004

Hebrew Bible offers alternative Economic utopia for building Theocratic society. In this paper, various economic concepts and themes are presented, as found in the Hebrew Bible. These economic concepts include taxation, property rights, labor market, social policy, banking, years of Sabbath and Jubilee, and business cycles. Most economic issues of the Bible are found in the texts of Torah, also known as five Books of Moses. These texts are analyzed by using classical Rabbinical commentaries for better insight. Contrary to the modern Economic theory which is based on the assumptions of scarcity of resources and unlimited needs of consumers, Economics of the Torah is based on God’s resources …

Hebrew Bible History of Economics History of Economic Thought Ancient Israel Judaismjel:B11
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