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Die theoretische Nationalökonomie Italiens in neuester Zeit
1891
by
Schullern-Schrattenhofen
Knowledge Economics
Economic History
Methodology
Ground Rent
Income Distribution
Interest Rates
Monetary Theory
Profit and Loss
Wages
Austrian School
Carl Menger
Public Finance
Mercantilism
Physiocracy
Frederic Bastiat
Emil Sax
Empiricism
Historical School
Mathematical Economics
Rationality
Classical Economics
Exchange Value
Capitalism
Collectivism
Individualism
Marginal Utility
Subjective Value
Albert Schaffle
Economic Policy
Abstinence Theory
Economic Goods
Factors of Production
Nassau Senior
Capital Theory
Production Costs
Capital Goods
Human Capital
Capital Accumulation
Saving
Entrepreneurship
Diminishing Returns
Labor Market
Raw Materials
Price Theory
Supply and Demand
Scarcity
Use Value
Labor Theory of Value
Alfred Marshall
Complementary Goods
Eugen von Bohm-Bawerk
Hermann Heinrich Gossen
Utilitarianism
William Stanley Jevons
Progressive Taxation
Taxation
David Ricardo
Objective Value
Fiat Money
Legal Tender
Commodity Money
Discount Rate
Exchange Rates
Balance of Payments
Banking
Banknotes
Interest Theory
Productivity
Property Rights
Competition
John Stuart Mill
Uncertainty
Cartels
Friedrich von Wieser
Interventionism
Economic Crisis
Division of Labor
Social Policy
Table of Contents · 54 segments
1
Google Books digitization notice and public-domain usage guidelines
essay
2
Title pages and publication information
essay
3
Table of contents and structure of the work
chapter
4
Introduction I: Revival of Italian political economy and foreign influences
chapter
5
Introduction II: Scope of the study and focus on theory
chapter
6
Introduction III: Older Italian economic literature and historical context
chapter
7
Introduction IV: Cossa’s account of the transition to the new school
chapter
8
Introduction V: Plan of the systematic exposition
chapter
9
Section I: Luigi Cossa on deduction, induction, and economic laws
theoretical
10
Section I: Nazzani on method, self-interest, autonomy, and historical relativity
theoretical
11
Section I: Wollemborg, Loria, and later Italian methodological positions
theoretical
12
Induction, deduction, and natural economic laws in Italian methodology
theoretical
13
Individualism versus collectivism in Italian economic theory
theoretical
14
Pure, applied, and sociological classifications of economics
theoretical
15
Introduction to the mathematical method in economics
theoretical
16
Method of Political Economy: Mathematics, History, and Loria on Deduction
theoretical
17
Section II, Chapter I: Production of Goods
chapter
18
Immaterial Goods and the General Problem of Productive Factors
theoretical
19
Italian Theories of Productive Factors: Nature, Labor, Capital, and Abstinence
theoretical
20
Definitions of Nature, Labor, and Capital as Productive Factors
theoretical
21
Origins of Capital through Production, Saving, and Abstinence
theoretical
22
Industrial Enterprise
theoretical
23
Limits of Production and Introduction to Circulation
chapter
24
Value and Price I: Historiography and Nazzani's Production-Cost Theory
theoretical
25
Value and Price II: Modified Cost Theories, Subjective Value, and Wollemborg
theoretical
26
Value and Price III: Loria's Historical Cost-Value Theory
theoretical
27
Value and Price IV: Ferrara's Reproduction-Cost Theory and Its Critics
theoretical
28
Value and Price V: Supino and Pantaleoni on Marginal Utility
theoretical
29
Value and Price VI: Other Italian Marginalists and Conigliani
theoretical
30
Value and Price VII: Alessio, Social Normal Value, and the Historical-Natural Law Debate
theoretical
31
Theory of Money: Benini’s Value and Non-Value Theory
theoretical
32
Intrinsic Value, Fiat Acceptance, and Instrumental Theories of Money
theoretical
33
Metallist Money Theories: Messedaglia, Ferraris, and De Viti de Marco
theoretical
34
Theory of Credit: Scope and Boccardo’s Evolutionary Account
theoretical
35
Credit Titles, Metallic Foundations, and the Transition to Chapter 3
theoretical
36
Chapter 3 Introduction: The Problem of Income Distribution
chapter
37
Income Distribution as a Unified Problem: Toniolo, General Rent, and Loria
theoretical
38
The Wage: Ricca-Salerno, Gobbi, Nazzani, and Pantaleoni
theoretical
39
Capital Interest
theoretical
40
Entrepreneurial Profit
theoretical
41
Ground Rent: Ricardian Foundations and Italian Revisions
theoretical
42
Monopoly and Conjunctural Gains: Over-Profits and Their Limits
theoretical
43
Remuneration for Personal Services and Transition to Income-Share Relations
theoretical
44
Relations among Income Forms: Natural, Juridical, and Marginal-Utility Bases
theoretical
45
Distribution Systems, Private Property, and the Closing of the Distribution Discussion
theoretical
46
Chapter 4: Consumption and Economic Crises
chapter
47
Economic History and Statistics in Relation to Economic Theory
essay
48
Italian Economic History: Cognetti de Martiis and Toniolo
essay
49
Italian Economic Statistics: Bodio, Messedaglia, Pantaleoni, and Inductive Method
essay
50
History of Economic Doctrines in Italy
chapter
51
Conclusion: Scientific Schools in Italian Theoretical Economics
chapter
52
Subject Index
bibliography
53
Name Index and Digitization Artifacts
bibliography
54
Declassification Mark
bibliography