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Economic Wealth Creation and the Social Division of Labour Volume II: Network Economies

Title
Economic Wealth Creation and the Social Division of Labour [electronic resource] : Volume II: Network Economies / by Robert P. Gilles.
ISBN
9783030044268
Publication
Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019.
Physical Description
1 online resource (XIV, 311 p.) 48 illus., 45 illus. in color.
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
‘This is the second book of a two-volume set that continues Adam Smith's work, using the tools mathematical, experimental, and behavioural economists have developed since 1776. As in the first volume, markets are not the central organising principle. Instead, attention centres on social institutions and the division of labour that they enable. The book studies this via the endogenous division of labour that existing institutions help form. The first book in the series examined this problem deeply, resorting minimally to formal mathematical modelling; the second volume is where the formal modelling blossoms. General equilibrium theory meets network theory and receives a breath of fresh air, including a new viewpoint on economic inequality, the newly resurgent bane of capitalism. What I said for the first volume applies to this second volume equally: if you care to understand the economy, this book belongs to your bookshelf.’ —Dimitrios Diamantaras, Temple University, Philadelphia, USA This textbook introduces and develops new tools to understand the recent economic crisis and how desirable economic policies can be adopted. Gilles provides new institutional concepts for wealth creation, such as network economies, which are based on the social division of labour. This second volume introduces mathematical theories of the endogenous formation of social divisions of labour through which economic wealth is created. Gilles also investigates the causes of inequality in the social division of labour under imperfectly competitive conditions. These theories frame a comprehensive, innovative and consistent perspective on the functioning of the twenty-first century global economy, explaining many of its failings. Suitable reading for advanced undergraduate, MSc and postgraduate students in microeconomic analysis, economic theory and political economy. Robert P. Gilles is Professor of Economics at Queen’s University Belfast, UK. He has previously taught in the USA and the Netherlands. His research focuses on the economic theory of the social division of labour.
Variant and related titles
Springer ENIN.
Other formats
Printed edition:
Printed edition:
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
February 27, 2019
Contents
Chapter 1: Commodities, consumption and production
Chapter 2: Wealth creation in primitive economies
Chapter 3: The competitive price mechanism
Chapter 4: Objective specialisation: The Smithian perspective
Chapter 5: Production networks
Chapter 6: Inequality in network economies.
Citation

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