Outline for a revision of The Great transformation (1954): Difference between revisions
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I The Market Economy | *I The Market Economy | ||
**1. What it is and does – a theoretical model | |||
***Prices as the governing element | |||
***Analogy of the thermostat, the automatic governor | |||
**2. Commodities, real and fictitious | |||
**3. Motives | |||
*II Contrast | |||
**1. Primitive economies, examples, motives | |||
II Contrast | **2. Mercantilism, single markets | ||
**3. The economy embedded in society | |||
**4. A substantive approach | |||
*III The Rise of Market Economy | |||
**1. Early history, the machine and the Industrial Revolution | |||
**2. Labour | |||
**3. Land | |||
III The Rise of Market Economy | **4. Money, prices | ||
**5. Gold standard and the international archway | |||
*IV The Origins of Economic Theory | |||
**1. The two meanings of economic | |||
**2. The classical school | |||
**3. Marxism | |||
*V The Reality of Society | |||
**1. Economic liberalism, philosophy and conspiracy | |||
IV The Origins of Economic Theory | **2. Rates of change. Impact on primitive societies | ||
**3. Robert Owen and the critique of market economy | |||
*VI The Double Movement | |||
**1. Man | |||
**2. Nature | |||
**3. Productive Organization | |||
V The Reality of Society | *VII Breakdown and Emerging Adjustment | ||
**1. Nineteenth century civilization, 4 institutions. | |||
**2. Short history to 1933 | |||
**3. Fascism | |||
**4. Russia | |||
**5. The New Deal | |||
VI The Double Movement | *VIII The Human Perspective | ||
**1. America in the Post-war period | |||
**2. Re-embedding the economy in non-economic institutions: | |||
***The trade union | |||
***The corporation | |||
***The government | |||
VII Breakdown and Emerging Adjustment | **3. The significance of functional finance | ||
**4. Relativizing the market and freedom from economics” | |||
**5. Freedom and peace: from Economics to Politics. | |||
VIII The Human Perspective | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
'''Reference''':<br /> | '''Reference''':<br /> | ||
'''Date''': 1954<br /> | '''Date''': February 24, [[1954]]<br /> | ||
'''KPA''': 38/12 | '''KPA''': [[38/12]] |
Latest revision as of 00:06, 4 April 2019
- I The Market Economy
- 1. What it is and does – a theoretical model
- Prices as the governing element
- Analogy of the thermostat, the automatic governor
- 2. Commodities, real and fictitious
- 3. Motives
- 1. What it is and does – a theoretical model
- II Contrast
- 1. Primitive economies, examples, motives
- 2. Mercantilism, single markets
- 3. The economy embedded in society
- 4. A substantive approach
- III The Rise of Market Economy
- 1. Early history, the machine and the Industrial Revolution
- 2. Labour
- 3. Land
- 4. Money, prices
- 5. Gold standard and the international archway
- IV The Origins of Economic Theory
- 1. The two meanings of economic
- 2. The classical school
- 3. Marxism
- V The Reality of Society
- 1. Economic liberalism, philosophy and conspiracy
- 2. Rates of change. Impact on primitive societies
- 3. Robert Owen and the critique of market economy
- VI The Double Movement
- 1. Man
- 2. Nature
- 3. Productive Organization
- VII Breakdown and Emerging Adjustment
- 1. Nineteenth century civilization, 4 institutions.
- 2. Short history to 1933
- 3. Fascism
- 4. Russia
- 5. The New Deal
- VIII The Human Perspective
- 1. America in the Post-war period
- 2. Re-embedding the economy in non-economic institutions:
- The trade union
- The corporation
- The government
- 3. The significance of functional finance
- 4. Relativizing the market and freedom from economics”
- 5. Freedom and peace: from Economics to Politics.