TY - BOOK ID - 67025086 TI - Money and households in a capitalist economy : a gendered post Keynesian-institutional analysis PY - 2009 SN - 9781847209535 184720953X PB - Cheltenham: Elgar, DB - UniCat KW - Family KW - Households KW - Money KW - Keynesian economics KW - Economic aspects KW - 311.95 KW - 339.0 KW - 339.112.0 KW - 339.230 KW - 339.325.1 KW - AA / International- internationaal KW - Currency KW - Monetary question KW - Money, Primitive KW - Specie KW - Standard of value KW - Exchange KW - Finance KW - Value KW - Banks and banking KW - Coinage KW - Currency question KW - Gold KW - Silver KW - Silver question KW - Wealth KW - Post-Keynesian economics KW - Schools of economics KW - Families KW - Family life KW - Family relationships KW - Family structure KW - Relationships, Family KW - Structure, Family KW - Social institutions KW - Birth order KW - Domestic relations KW - Home KW - Kinship KW - Marriage KW - Matriarchy KW - Parenthood KW - Patriarchy KW - Bevolking naar het geslacht KW - Algemeenheden. Nationale rekeningen KW - Particulier vermogen: algemeenheden KW - Particuliere inkomens: algemeenheden KW - Evolutie van de consumptie. Budget van de huishoudens KW - Social aspects KW - Social conditions KW - Family - Economic aspects KW - Households - Economic aspects UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:67025086 AB - Post Keynesian analysis of monetary production have not provided much attention to households as institutions, while a good deal of the literature in feminist economics discusses households in a strictly microeconomic context, with little consideration of monetary phenomena. This book, a unique study of the capitalist economy, utilizes a distinctive combination of Post Keynesian, institutional and gender analysis to examine household economics in capitalist society in order to flesh out the gaps in each. The author poses questions that cut across rigidly determined areas of inquiry, such as gender and money and micro- and macroeconomic analysis. She grounds the discussion of households and their social and financial relations within a monetary theory of production, provides many methodological, theoretical, and policy formulation insights to establish a framework that illuminates current problems of household debt. The book connects the three aforementioned traditions in heterodox economics and offers to the reader a stimulating discussion of contemporary capitalist relations. Academics, post-graduate and undergraduate readers in institutional, Post Keynesian, social and feminist economics will enjoy the new perspectives in this book. ER -