Capitalism for beginners / by Robert Lekachman & Borin Van Loon.
Material type: TextPublication details: New York, NY : Pantheon Books, c1981.Edition: 1st American edDescription: 174 pages. : black and white illustrations ; 21 cmISBN:- 0394510275 :
- 0394738632
- 330.12/2 19
- HB 501 .L3135 1981
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
BOOKS | Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library General Stacks | HB 501 .L3135 1981 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | NPML19070033 |
Cartoon-style illustrations throughout the book convey the narrative.
Bibliographical references (page 174.)
"Perturbed by stagnation? In pain from recession? Sick with worry about whether the world economy can survive? You've gone to your corner economist and you can't understand the cure? Finally! An amusing, soundly researched, and highly accessible book that tells you everything you want to know about capitalism--the system its greatest theorists thought could never survive. In this fair, concise, and good-humored book, Robert Lekachman, Distinguished Professor of Economics at the City University of New York, assesses capitalism for what it's supposed to do: deliver the goods. He starts by questioning the United States, where capitalism seems as natural as breathing and the free market is as much a byword as Mom's apple pie. But what are the realities? To understand them, he wittily documents capitalism's history from Adam Smith and Karl Marx to late last night; from merchantilism to monetarism, with explanations in between of investment and money, business cycles, the postwar boom, and the present recession. No sermons are preached. Readers must consider for themselves the dilemma that confronts us all: the future of capitalism and its effect on the world." --From the back cover.
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