Marx and Keynes ; the limits of the mixed economy / by Paul Mattick
Material type: TextSeries: Extending horizons booksPublication details: Boston : Porter Sargent, [1969]Description: viii, 364 pages ; 21 cmOther title:- Marx & Keynes ; the limits of the mixed economy
- 330.15/6
- HB 97.5 .M35 1969
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOKS | Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library General Stacks | The Roscoe Proctor Collection | HB 97.5 .M35 1969 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | NPML20010005 |
Tables include detailed economic statistics
Bibliographical references pages (342-344) and index
1. The Keynesian revolution -- 2. Marx and Keynes -- 3. Marx's labor theory of value -- 4. Value and price -- 5. The law of value as "equilibrium mechanism" -- 6. Accumulation and the falling rate of profit -- 7. The business cycle -- 8. The realization of surplus value -- 9. Capitalism in crises -- 10. The expropriation of capital -- 11. Saving capitalism -- 12. Keynesianism in reverse -- 13. The "transformation" of capitalism -- 14. The mixed economy -- 15. Money and capital -- 16. Technology and the mixed economy -- 17. Capital formation and foreign trade -- 18. Economic development -- 19. The imperialist imperative -- 20. State capitalism and the mixed economy -- 21. Marxism and socialism -- 22. Value and socialism.
This book "deals with all the significant problems of the political economy: capital formation, money, credit, foreign trade, the balance of payments, state capitalism, imperialism, neocolonialism, and so forth. In his critical analysis of the theories of Marx and Keynes, Mr. Mattick challenges the prevailing assumption that the economic system is no longer susceptible to crisis and depression. The Keynesian hypothesis has presumed to answer contemporary needs for a more stable and more extended economic structure. This book weighs these resources and methods against Marx's prediction of the inherent decline and collapse of capitalism. Mattick's sure grasp of both Marxist and Keynesian theory allows a clear and incisive exposition of their common features and divergences, and their relevance to the historical and contemporary outlines of the political economy." --From the dust jacket
From the library of: Roscoe & Oleta Proctor
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