A theory of economic history / by John Hicks.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Oxford : Oxford University Press, 1969.Description: ix, 181 pages ; 21 cmISBN:
  • 0198282478
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 330/.09
LOC classification:
  • HC 26 .H5 1969
Online resources:
Contents:
I. Theory and history -- II. Custom and command -- III. The rise of the market -- IV. City states and colonies -- V. Money, law, and credit -- VI. The finances of the sovereign -- VII. The mercantilization of agriculture -- VIII The labour market -- IX. The industrial revolution -- X. Conclusion.
Summary: "Economists are inclined to think of the market economy as always existing, just developing, or "growing". Historians -- an anthropologists -- know very well that this is not the case ; quite viable non-market societies have existed upon the base of "customary" institutions ; others have embodied "revenue" economies, drawing upon agricultural surplus. An attempt is made in this book to bridge these differing approaches to economic history and theory. Its subject is the evolution of the market economy, and of its forms and institutions. While this evolution has produced many benefits, it has also its darker sides, such as slavery, usury, and the ignobler aspects of colonization. The author, an eminent British economist, gives considerable attention to these last. His discussion culminates in an analysis of the Industrial Revolution, the logic of which he maintains, has by no means been fully comprehended. The book is "theory:, concerned with principles ; but the principles are illustrated by examples drawn from four thousand years of history, and from many places, not only in Europe, but in the rest of the world." -- back cover.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
BOOKS BOOKS Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library General Stacks HC 26 .H5 1969 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Not For Loan NPML20050004

Includes index.

I. Theory and history -- II. Custom and command -- III. The rise of the market -- IV. City states and colonies -- V. Money, law, and credit -- VI. The finances of the sovereign -- VII. The mercantilization of agriculture -- VIII The labour market -- IX. The industrial revolution -- X. Conclusion.

"Economists are inclined to think of the market economy as always existing, just developing, or "growing". Historians -- an anthropologists -- know very well that this is not the case ; quite viable non-market societies have existed upon the base of "customary" institutions ; others have embodied "revenue" economies, drawing upon agricultural surplus. An attempt is made in this book to bridge these differing approaches to economic history and theory. Its subject is the evolution of the market economy, and of its forms and institutions. While this evolution has produced many benefits, it has also its darker sides, such as slavery, usury, and the ignobler aspects of colonization. The author, an eminent British economist, gives considerable attention to these last. His discussion culminates in an analysis of the Industrial Revolution, the logic of which he maintains, has by no means been fully comprehended. The book is "theory:, concerned with principles ; but the principles are illustrated by examples drawn from four thousand years of history, and from many places, not only in Europe, but in the rest of the world." -- back cover.

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