Post-Keynesian economists: Piero Sraffa, Luigi Pasinetti, Michal Kalecki, Irving Fisher, Hyman Minsky, Paul Davidson, Joan Robinson, Bill Mitchell, ... S. Shackle, Anthony Thirlwall, Alfred Eichner Buy on Amazon

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Post-Keynesian economists: Piero Sraffa, Luigi Pasinetti, Michal Kalecki, Irving Fisher, Hyman Minsky, Paul Davidson, Joan Robinson, Bill Mitchell, ... S. Shackle, Anthony Thirlwall, Alfred Eichner

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ISBN / ASIN1230523278
ISBN-139781230523279
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank4,043,735
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 38. Chapters: Piero Sraffa, Luigi Pasinetti, Michał Kalecki, Irving Fisher, Hyman Minsky, Paul Davidson, Joan Robinson, Bill Mitchell, Steve Keen, Nicholas Kaldor, G. L. S. Shackle, Anthony Thirlwall, Alfred Eichner, Abba P. Lerner, Joan Muysken, Geoff Harcourt, Josef Steindl, Victoria Chick, Jan Kregel, Thomas Palley, Basil Moore, Sidney Weintraub, List of Post-Keynesian economists. Excerpt: Luigi L. Pasinetti (born September 12, 1930) is an Italian economist of the Post-Keynesians school. Pasinetti is considered the heir of the "Cambridge Keynesians" and a student of Piero Sraffa and Richard Kahn. Along with them, as well as Joan Robinson, he was one of the prominent members on the "Cambridge, UK" side of the Cambridge capital controversy. His contributions to economics include developing the analytical foundations of Neo-Ricardian economics, including the theory of value and distribution, as well as work in the line of Kaldorian theory of growth and income distribution. He has also developed the theory of structural change and economic growth, structural economic dynamics and uneven sectoral development. Luigi Lodovico Pasinetti was born on September 12, 1930, in Zanica, near Bergamo, in the north of Italy. He began his economics studies at the Universitá Cattolica S.C. of Milan, where he obtained his "laurea" degree in 1954. The thesis that he presented dealt with econometric models applied to the analysis of the trade cycle. As a brilliant student, he won several scholarships for graduate studies which gained him access to Cambridge, England (1956 and 1958), Harvard, U.S.A. (1957) and Oxford, England (1959) for his graduate studies. In 1960 Nuffield College (Oxford) granted him a Research Fellowship that he enjoyed until 1962, the year in which he left Oxford for Cambridge, UK, called there by the prestigious economist...

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