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Palgrave Macmillan

Richard F. Kahn

Collected Economic Essays

  • Book
  • © 2022

Overview

  • Follows the plan Richard F. Kahn laid out in the 1980s for the publication of a second collection of essays
  • Shows how Keynesian ideas developed and evolved over time
  • Highlights ideas which can be applied to current economic issues and challenges

Part of the book series: Palgrave Studies in the History of Economic Thought (PHET)

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Table of contents (13 chapters)

  1. Imperfect Competition

  2. Keynes

  3. International Money and Trade

  4. Unemployment and Inflation

Keywords

About this book

This book brings together important essays by Richard F. Kahn, Keynes’s pupil and literary executor and one of the most influential economists in the Cambridge tradition. The essays address issues, including imperfect competition, pricing mechanisms, inflation, unemployment, and the regulation of international trade and finance, that are highly relevant and topical They are addressed from a Keynesian perspective, with the interface between economic theory and policy explored. With the inclusion of a new introduction, the essays are placed in their own context and offer the key to understand their relevance for the present.

Richard F. Kahn: Collected Economic Essays is a fitting companion to the 1972 collection of essays, edited by Kahn himself. It will be of interest to scholars and students as a key to an outstanding economist and a great figure in the Keynesian tradition.

Reviews

“Richard Kahn is of great interest to historians of economics because of his role at the centre of two of the central developments in economics in the 20th century: imperfect competition and the Keynesian revolution. This collection, including an important, previously unpublished paper from 1933, and the very helpful editorial introduction successfully illustrate the evolution of Kahn's thinking from the 1930s to the 1970s.” —Roger E. Backhouse, University of Birmingham and Erasmus University Rotterdam

“A long-awaited second collection of Richard Kahn’s essays including his later reflections on Keynes and analysis of the postwar international economy and problems of unemployment and inflation – accompanied by an excellent introduction by the editors.  An important contribution to the history of economics.”

John B. Davis, University of Amsterdam and Marquette University

“This valuable and fascinating collection documentsRichard Kahn's central role in the imperfect competition and Keynesian revolutions in economics, making conveniently accessible his articles on imperfect competition, on Keynes, and on inflation and unemployment, including a pathbreaking 1933 paper on imperfect competition previously published only in Italian translation. The helpful and informative editorial introduction provides a useful guide to the nature and importance of Kahn's contributions. Every economist interested in the imperfect competition and Keynesian revolutions should have this book.”

Robert W. Dimand, Brock University




Editors and Affiliations

  • Department of Statistical Sciences, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy

    Maria Cristina Marcuzzo

  • Department of Economics and Finance, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy

    Paolo Paesani

About the editors

Richard F. Kahn was Professor of Economics at the University of Cambridge. His work focused on Keynesian economics and he is best known for his work on the principle of the multiplier.

Maria Cristina Marcuzzo is Honorary Professor at La Sapienza University of Rome and a Fellow of the Italian Academy of the Lincei.

Paolo Paesani is Associate Professor at the University of Rome Tor Vergata where he teaches History of Economic Thought and Economic Policy.

Bibliographic Information

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