The Routledge Handbook of Heterodox Economics: Theorizing, Analyzing, and Transforming Capitalism

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Tae-Hee Jo, Lynne Chester, Carlo D'Ippoliti
Routledge, 28.07.2017 - 566 Seiten

The Routledge Handbook of Heterodox Economics presents a comprehensive overview of the latest work on economic theory and policy from a ‘pluralistic’ heterodox perspective.

Contributions throughout the Handbook explore different theoretical perspectives including: Marxian-radical political economics; Post Keynesian-Sraffian economics; institutionalist-evolutionary economics; feminist economics; social economics; Régulation theory; the Social Structure of Accumulation approach; and ecological economics. They explain the structural properties and dynamics of capitalism, as well as propose economic and social policies for the benefit of the majority of the population. This book aims, firstly, to provide realistic and coherent theoretical frameworks to understand the capitalist economy in a constructive and forward-looking manner. Secondly, it delineates the future directions, as well as the current state, of heterodox economics, and then provides both ‘heat and light’ on controversial issues, drawing out the commonalities and differences among different heterodox economic approaches. The volume also envisions transformative economic and social policies for the majority of the population and explains why economics is, and should be treated as, a social science.

This Handbook will be of compelling interest to those, including students, who wish to learn about alternative economic theories and policies that are rarely found in conventional economics textbooks or discussed in the mainstream media, and to critical economists and other social scientists who are concerned with analyzing pressing socio-economic issues.

Im Buch

Inhalt

The state of the art and challenges
a heterodox
historical
Accumulation regimes
institutional forms
Monetary theories of production
economy
Marx
Shadow banking
prospects for wellbeing
of earnings and poverty risk by employment status
Inequality and poverty
exclusion
The dynamics of capitalist socioeconomic structure
an analytical and historical overview
A heterodox reconstruction of trade theory

distribution and growth model
a brief history
Theories of prices and alternative economic
Heterodox theories of distribution
surplus wages
The micromacro link in heterodox
development in a systemist framework drawing
Society and its institutions
Heterodox economics and theories
interactive agency
Households in heterodox economic theory
A heterodox theory of the business enterprise
Heterodox theories of business competition and market governance
A Marxian understanding of the nature and form of dominant capitalist legal institutions
Money and monetary regimes 18 Banks in developing countries
thoughts from the periphery
an institutionalheterodox framework
Heterodox theories of the business cycle
Heterodox theories of economic growth
Financialization and the crises of capitalism
Germany France UK and US 19752011
the Post Keynesian and Marxian alternatives
Energy environment and the economy
Transforming the capitalist social provisioning process
An exit strategy from capitalisms
and ecological spheres
19502013
and policy
Heterodox economics as a living body
Index

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Autoren-Profil (2017)

Tae-Hee Jo is Associate Professor in the Economics and Finance Department at The State University of New York–Buffalo State, USA, and a former Editor of the Heterodox Economics Newsletter (2009–13). He has been working on heterodox microeconomic theory from institutionalist, Marxian, and Post Keynesian perspectives.

Lynne Chester is Associate Professor in the University of Sydney’s Department of Political Economy, Australia. She is recognized as a leading Australian scholar in the empirical application of Régulation theory. Her research focuses on a range of energy issues (affordability, security, markets, price formation, the environment) and the policy responses of capitalist economies through different institutional forms.

Carlo D’Ippoliti is Associate Professor of Economics at Sapienza University of Rome, Italy. He is the editor of PSL Quarterly Review and of Moneta e Credito, and his research focuses on the history of economic thought, feminist economics, and European political economy.

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