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855 books · 38,737 segments · 432 taxonomy tags

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Die theoretische Nationalökonomie Italiens in neuester Zeit

1891

by Schullern-Schrattenhofen

Knowledge EconomicsEconomic HistoryMethodologyGround RentIncome DistributionInterest RatesMonetary TheoryProfit and LossWagesAustrian SchoolCarl MengerPublic FinanceMercantilismPhysiocracyFrederic BastiatEmil SaxEmpiricismHistorical SchoolMathematical EconomicsRationalityClassical EconomicsExchange ValueCapitalismCollectivismIndividualismMarginal UtilitySubjective ValueAlbert SchaffleEconomic PolicyAbstinence TheoryEconomic GoodsFactors of ProductionNassau SeniorCapital TheoryProduction CostsCapital GoodsHuman CapitalCapital AccumulationSavingEntrepreneurshipDiminishing ReturnsLabor MarketRaw MaterialsPrice TheorySupply and DemandScarcityUse ValueLabor Theory of ValueAlfred MarshallComplementary GoodsEugen von Bohm-BawerkHermann Heinrich GossenUtilitarianismWilliam Stanley JevonsProgressive TaxationTaxationDavid RicardoObjective ValueFiat MoneyLegal TenderCommodity MoneyDiscount RateExchange RatesBalance of PaymentsBankingBanknotesInterest TheoryProductivityProperty RightsCompetitionJohn Stuart MillUncertaintyCartelsFriedrich von WieserInterventionismEconomic CrisisDivision of LaborSocial Policy

Table of Contents · 54 segments

1
Google Books digitization notice and public-domain usage guidelinesessay
2
Title pages and publication informationessay
3
Table of contents and structure of the workchapter
4
Introduction I: Revival of Italian political economy and foreign influenceschapter
5
Introduction II: Scope of the study and focus on theorychapter
6
Introduction III: Older Italian economic literature and historical contextchapter
7
Introduction IV: Cossa’s account of the transition to the new schoolchapter
8
Introduction V: Plan of the systematic expositionchapter
9
Section I: Luigi Cossa on deduction, induction, and economic lawstheoretical
10
Section I: Nazzani on method, self-interest, autonomy, and historical relativitytheoretical
11
Section I: Wollemborg, Loria, and later Italian methodological positionstheoretical
12
Induction, deduction, and natural economic laws in Italian methodologytheoretical
13
Individualism versus collectivism in Italian economic theorytheoretical
14
Pure, applied, and sociological classifications of economicstheoretical
15
Introduction to the mathematical method in economicstheoretical
16
Method of Political Economy: Mathematics, History, and Loria on Deductiontheoretical
17
Section II, Chapter I: Production of Goodschapter
18
Immaterial Goods and the General Problem of Productive Factorstheoretical
19
Italian Theories of Productive Factors: Nature, Labor, Capital, and Abstinencetheoretical
20
Definitions of Nature, Labor, and Capital as Productive Factorstheoretical
21
Origins of Capital through Production, Saving, and Abstinencetheoretical
22
Industrial Enterprisetheoretical
23
Limits of Production and Introduction to Circulationchapter
24
Value and Price I: Historiography and Nazzani's Production-Cost Theorytheoretical
25
Value and Price II: Modified Cost Theories, Subjective Value, and Wollemborgtheoretical
26
Value and Price III: Loria's Historical Cost-Value Theorytheoretical
27
Value and Price IV: Ferrara's Reproduction-Cost Theory and Its Criticstheoretical
28
Value and Price V: Supino and Pantaleoni on Marginal Utilitytheoretical
29
Value and Price VI: Other Italian Marginalists and Coniglianitheoretical
30
Value and Price VII: Alessio, Social Normal Value, and the Historical-Natural Law Debatetheoretical
31
Theory of Money: Benini’s Value and Non-Value Theorytheoretical
32
Intrinsic Value, Fiat Acceptance, and Instrumental Theories of Moneytheoretical
33
Metallist Money Theories: Messedaglia, Ferraris, and De Viti de Marcotheoretical
34
Theory of Credit: Scope and Boccardo’s Evolutionary Accounttheoretical
35
Credit Titles, Metallic Foundations, and the Transition to Chapter 3theoretical
36
Chapter 3 Introduction: The Problem of Income Distributionchapter
37
Income Distribution as a Unified Problem: Toniolo, General Rent, and Loriatheoretical
38
The Wage: Ricca-Salerno, Gobbi, Nazzani, and Pantaleonitheoretical
39
Capital Interesttheoretical
40
Entrepreneurial Profittheoretical
41
Ground Rent: Ricardian Foundations and Italian Revisionstheoretical
42
Monopoly and Conjunctural Gains: Over-Profits and Their Limitstheoretical
43
Remuneration for Personal Services and Transition to Income-Share Relationstheoretical
44
Relations among Income Forms: Natural, Juridical, and Marginal-Utility Basestheoretical
45
Distribution Systems, Private Property, and the Closing of the Distribution Discussiontheoretical
46
Chapter 4: Consumption and Economic Criseschapter
47
Economic History and Statistics in Relation to Economic Theoryessay
48
Italian Economic History: Cognetti de Martiis and Tonioloessay
49
Italian Economic Statistics: Bodio, Messedaglia, Pantaleoni, and Inductive Methodessay
50
History of Economic Doctrines in Italychapter
51
Conclusion: Scientific Schools in Italian Theoretical Economicschapter
52
Subject Indexbibliography
53
Name Index and Digitization Artifactsbibliography
54
Declassification Markbibliography