Economics and its history | p. 1 |
Ancient and medieval economic thought and institutions | p. 9 |
Mercantilism | p. 44 |
Emergence of capitalism | p. 68 |
Adam Smith : system builder | p. 101 |
Classical economics (I) : utility, population, and money | p. 127 |
Classical economics (II) : the Ricardian system and its critics | p. 143 |
Classical economics (III) : John Stuart Mill | p. 167 |
Economic policy in the classical period | p. 192 |
Heterodox economic thought | p. 217 |
Karl Marx : revolt against classical economics | p. 243 |
Early "neoclassical" economists : Cournot and Dupuit | p. 267 |
Microeconomics in Germany and Austria : Menger, Wieser, and Bohm-Bawerk | p. 292 |
Microeconomics in England and America : W. S. Jevons and J. B. Clark | p. 319 |
Alfred Marshall and the neoclassical synthesis | p. 344 |
The mantle of Leon Walras | p. 381 |
Hegemony of neoclassical economics | p. 399 |
Thorstein Veblen and American institutional economics | p. 421 |
Competition revised : Chamberlin and Robinson | p. 452 |
John Maynard Keynes and the development of modern macroeconomics | p. 471 |
Contemporary macroeconomics : monetarism and rational expectations | p. 494 |
Austrian economics | p. 512 |
The new political economy : public choice and regulation | p. 535 |
Mathematical and empirical economics : a method revolution | p. 561 |
Expanding the boundaries of contemporary microeconomics | p. 588 |
Quo Vadis? : economics in the twenty-first century | p. 604 |
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