Theories of Financial Disturbance
Theories of Financial Disturbance
An Examination of Critical Theories of Finance from Adam Smith to the Present Day
Toporowski, Jan
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
04/2005
208
Dura
Inglês
9781843764779
15 a 20 dias
Introduction
Part I: A Premonition of Financial Fragility
1. Adam Smith's Economic Case Against Usury
2. The Vindication of Finance
Part II: Critical Theories of Finance in the Twentieth Century: Unstable Money and Finance
3. Thorstein Veblen and Those 'Captains of Finance'
4. Rosa Luxemburg and the Marxist Subordination of Finance
5. Ralph Hawtrey and the Monetary Business Cycle
6. Irving Fisher and Debt Deflation
7. John Maynard Keynes's Financial Theory of Under-Investment I: Towards Doubt
8. John Maynard Keynes's Financial Theory of Under-Investment II: Towards Uncertainty
Part III: Critical Theories of Finance in the Twentieth Century: In the Shadow of Keynes
9. The Principle of Increasing Risk I: Marek Breit
10. The Principle of Increasing Risk II: Michal Kalecki
11. The Principle of Increasing Risk III: Michal Kalecki and Josef Steindl on Profits and Finance
12. A Brief Digression on Later Developments in Economics and Finance
13. The East Coast Historians: John Kenneth Galbraith, Charles P. Kindleberger and Robert Shiller
14. Hyman P. Minsky's Financial Instability Hypothesis
15. Conclusion: The Disturbance of Economists by Finance Bibliography
Index
Introduction
Part I: A Premonition of Financial Fragility
1. Adam Smith's Economic Case Against Usury
2. The Vindication of Finance
Part II: Critical Theories of Finance in the Twentieth Century: Unstable Money and Finance
3. Thorstein Veblen and Those 'Captains of Finance'
4. Rosa Luxemburg and the Marxist Subordination of Finance
5. Ralph Hawtrey and the Monetary Business Cycle
6. Irving Fisher and Debt Deflation
7. John Maynard Keynes's Financial Theory of Under-Investment I: Towards Doubt
8. John Maynard Keynes's Financial Theory of Under-Investment II: Towards Uncertainty
Part III: Critical Theories of Finance in the Twentieth Century: In the Shadow of Keynes
9. The Principle of Increasing Risk I: Marek Breit
10. The Principle of Increasing Risk II: Michal Kalecki
11. The Principle of Increasing Risk III: Michal Kalecki and Josef Steindl on Profits and Finance
12. A Brief Digression on Later Developments in Economics and Finance
13. The East Coast Historians: John Kenneth Galbraith, Charles P. Kindleberger and Robert Shiller
14. Hyman P. Minsky's Financial Instability Hypothesis
15. Conclusion: The Disturbance of Economists by Finance Bibliography
Index