Karlheinz Muhr Library
CatalogTimeline
Karlheinz Muhr Library

The Complete “Austrian School of Economics” Collection. Explore 150 years of economic thought through an AI-powered library agent.

Explore

  • Catalog
  • Timeline

Research

  • Ask the Librarian
  • Sign In

855 books · 38,737 segments · 432 taxonomy tags

Built by krin.ai

HomeCatalog

Aufriss der ökonomischen Theorie Grundzüge der ökonomischen Theorie

1931

by Lederer

Emil LedererLabor Theory of ValueMarginal UtilityGround RentInterest TheoryMonopolyProfit and LossWagesZurechnungAlfred MarshallCarl MengerEconomic HistoryEconomic PolicyGustav SchmollerJoseph SchumpeterMax WeberMethodologyWerner SombartAlbert SchaffleCapitalismDavid RicardoEugen von Bohm-BawerkHistorical SchoolIdeologyKarl MarxEmpiricismEpistemologyFriedrich von WieserAdam SmithEquilibriumMercantilismPhysiocracyPrice TheoryHans MayerProperty RightsRationalitySubjective ValueDivision of LaborKarl BucherMonetary TheoryRaw MaterialsScarcityFriedrich EngelsHermann Heinrich GossenPlanned EconomySupply and DemandAlfred AmonnCapital GoodsEconomic GoodsFactors of ProductionUse ValueAustrian SchoolEconomic CalculationCapital TheoryPurchasing PowerAccountingCompetitionEntrepreneurshipExchange ValueGustav CasselCoercionFeudalismSocialismIdeal TypePrice MechanismCatallacticsClassical EconomicsMarxismMathematical EconomicsCausalityTeleologyBoom and BustRoundabout ProductionStationary EconomyCapital AccumulationEconomic DevelopmentInnovationIncome DistributionLabor MobilityDiminishing ReturnsLabor MarketProletariatSurplus ValueEffective DemandCapital MovementsInternational TradeMarginal CostCartelsElasticity of DemandLeon WalrasWilliam Stanley JevonsProduction CostsSay's LawOpportunity CostProductivityNeoclassical EconomicsValuationJohn Bates ClarkPrice FormationTime PreferenceAbstinence TheoryExploitationBusiness CyclesInterest RatesInsuranceLabor LawNationalization

Table of Contents · 87 segments

1
Digitization Notice and Title Pagesbibliography
2
Preface to the Revised Editionessay
3
Table of Contentsbibliography
4
Current State of Economic Theory and Its Relation to Policy and Historychapter
5
Economic Theory and Social Theorytheoretical
6
Methodological Preliminaries: Temporal or Timeless Validity of Theorytheoretical
7
Reality and Science in Economic Theorytheoretical
8
The Development of Economic Theory Between Reality and Scientific Constructiontheoretical
9
Economy and Economic Actiontheoretical
10
Basic Forms of the Economytheoretical
11
Natural Facts of Economizing, Economic Form, and Economic Theorytheoretical
12
Needs and Demandtheoretical
13
Good and Commoditytheoretical
14
Money as a Condition of Divided-Labor Exchange Economytheoretical
15
Means of Production and Capitaltheoretical
16
Yield and Profittheoretical
17
Producer and Entrepreneurtheoretical
18
Use Value, Exchange Value, Value and Pricetheoretical
19
Corresponding Basic Concepts of Economic Systemstheoretical
20
Economic and Quasi-Economic Systems in Economic Theorytheoretical
21
Profit as the Central Concept of the Developed Exchange Economytheoretical
22
Totality in Economic Theorytheoretical
23
The Necessity of Isolating Analysistheoretical
24
Statics and the Static Economytheoretical
25
The Dynamic Economytheoretical
26
The Significance of Exchange in the Labor Theory of Valuetheoretical
27
The Rule of Supply and Demandtheoretical
28
Why Mere Use Value Does Not Explain Exchangetheoretical
29
The Basic Idea and General Significance of the Labor Theory of Valuetheoretical
30
Validity of the Labor Theory of Value in a Simple Exchange Economytheoretical
31
Labor-Value Theory in the Developed Exchange Economytheoretical
32
First Difficulty: Interest and the Introduction of Machinestheoretical
33
Second Difficulty: Ground Rent and Ricardo’s Differential Rent Theorytheoretical
34
Third Difficulty: The Price of Labor Powertheoretical
35
Fourth Difficulty: Equalization of Profit Ratestheoretical
36
Limits of the Labor Theory of Value: Introductory Assessmenttheoretical
37
Production Price and Social Needtheoretical
38
Value Determination in International Tradetheoretical
39
Monopoly Price and the Limits of Labor-Value Theorytheoretical
40
Use Value and Marginal Utility Theory: Return to Use Valuechapter
41
Subjective Value Theory, Psychology, and Marginal Utilitytheoretical
42
The Law of Need-Satiation for Durable Goodstheoretical
43
Valuation by the Isolated Economic Actortheoretical
44
Non-Quantifiability of Subjective Valuationstheoretical
45
Marginal Utility and the Transfer from Robinson Economy to Exchangetheoretical
46
Isolated Exchange and the Indeterminacy of the Exchange Ratiotheoretical
47
One-Sided Competition in Exchangetheoretical
48
Bilateral Competition and Böhm-Bawerk’s Boundary-Pair Price Formationtheoretical
49
Effective Supply, Effective Demand, Consumer Surplus, and the Limits of Valuation Analysistheoretical
50
The Quantification of Value through Exchange and Moneytheoretical
51
Consumer Demand and the Preconditions of Subjective Valuationtheoretical
52
Labor as a Good in the Simple Exchange Economytheoretical
53
Recasting Labor Value in Subjective Value Theorytheoretical
54
Production Quantity, Effective Demand, and the Disutility of Labortheoretical
55
Prices of Different Labor Qualitiestheoretical
56
Further Consequences: Equilibrium in Static Exchange Economytheoretical
57
Demand Functions, Market Interdependence, and Walrasian Equilibriumtheoretical
58
The Substitution Principle and the Valuation of Production Elementstheoretical
59
The Concept of Costs in Marginal Utility Theorytheoretical
60
The Imputation Problem: Statement and Competing Solutionstheoretical
61
Wieser’s Simultaneous-Equation Imputation and Lederer’s Critiquetheoretical
62
Substitution and Specific Imputationtheoretical
63
Marginal Productivity: Method and Initial Objectionstheoretical
64
Clark’s Compensation Argument and Static Conditionstheoretical
65
Increasing Returns and Mayer’s Ratio Solutiontheoretical
66
Practice, Calculation, and the Imputation Problemtheoretical
67
Cost Comparability as a Condition of Imputationtheoretical
68
Utility, Supply Curves, and Objective Cost Relationstheoretical
69
Interest Problem: Introductory Orientationchapter
70
The Problem of Interesttheoretical
71
Rejection of Productivity Explanations of Interesttheoretical
72
Contemporary Interest Theories and Böhm-Bawerktheoretical
73
Böhm-Bawerk on Interest, Abstinence, Purchasing Power, and Dynamic Productiontheoretical
74
Cassel and Schumpeter on Interest in Dynamic Economytheoretical
75
Interest within Developed Capitalist Exchange Economytheoretical
76
The Structure of Capitalist Exchange Society and the Limits of Marginal Utilitytheoretical
77
The Location of the Interest Problem: Static and Dynamic Processestheoretical
78
Interest in the Total Context of Developed Exchange Economytheoretical
79
Surpluses as Results of Technical or Organizational Advantagetheoretical
80
Surplus as the Normal Result of Capitalist Enterprisetheoretical
81
The Effect of Population Growth on Profit and Interesttheoretical
82
Technical Progress with Constant Populationtheoretical
83
Production and Distribution According to Marginal Utility Theorychapter
84
Marginal Utility Theory and Monopoly Pricechapter
85
Publisher's List of Works by Emil Ledererbibliography
86
Advertisement for the Archive for Social Science and Social Policybibliography
87
Advertisement for the Contributions to Economic Theory Seriesbibliography