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Capitalist development in the twentieth century: an evolutionary-keynesian analysis
Authors: ---
ISBN: 0521341493 0511012705 1280151668 0511327749 0521349427 0511153104 0511052367 0511492413 0511115938 1107111498 9780511012709 9780511052361 9780511115936 9780511492419 9781280151668 9786610151660 6610151660 9780521341493 9780511153105 9780521349420 Year: 2007 Publisher: Cambridge Cambridge University Press

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Abstract

Capitalism in the twentieth century was marked by periods of persistent bad performance alternating with episodes of good performance. A lot of economic research ignores this phenomenon; other work concentrates almost exclusively on developing technology as its cause. This 2001 book draws upon Schumpeterian, Institutional and Keynesian economics to investigate how far these swings in performance can be explained as integral to capitalist development. The authors consider the macroeconomic record of the developed capitalist economies over the past 100 years (including rates of growth, inflation and unemployment) as well as the interaction of economic variables with the changing structural features of the economy in the course of industrialization and transformation. This approach allows for changes both in the economic structure and in the economic variables to be generated within the system. This study will be essential reading for macroeconomists and economic historians.

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