Principles of Economics, The Appendices


Leído por LibriVox Volunteers

(4.1 stars; 5 reviews)

Principles of Economics was a leading economics textbook of Alfred Marshall (1842-1924), first published in 1890. Marshall began writing the book in 1881, and he spent much of the next decade at work on it.

His plan for the work gradually extended to a two-volume compilation on the whole of economic thought; the first volume was published in 1890 to worldwide acclaim that established him as one of the leading economists of his time. It brought the ideas of supply and demand, of marginal utility and of the costs of production into a coherent whole, and became the dominant economic textbook in England for a long period. The second volume, which was to address foreign trade, money, trade fluctuations, taxation, and collectivism, was never published at all. (Summary from Wikipedia)

This reading is based on the eighth edition, published in 1920. (6 hr 59 min)

Capítulos

Appendix A: The Growth of Free Industry, Part 1 43:36 Leído por Rhonda Federman
Appendix A: The Growth of Free Industry, Part 2 45:35 Leído por Rhonda Federman
Appendix B: The Growth of Economic Science 39:19 Leído por Rhonda Federman
Appendix C: The Scope and Method of Economics 37:36 Leído por Rhonda Federman
Appendix D: Uses of Abstract Reasoning in Economics 9:59 Leído por icyjumbo (1964-2010)
Appendix E: Definitions of Capital 13:05 Leído por Sibella Denton
Appendix F: Barter 9:12 Leído por Sibella Denton
Appendix G: The Incidence Of Local Rates 57:21 Leído por webround
Appendix H: Limitations of the Use of Statical Assumptions 30:37 Leído por Sibella Denton
Appendix I: Ricardo’s Theory of Value 11:56 Leído por Sibella Denton
Appendix J: Doctrine of the Wages-fund 24:01 Leído por Sibella Denton
Appendix K: Certain Kinds of Surplus 21:41 Leído por Sibella Denton
Appendix L: Ricardo’s Doctrine As To Taxes 8:21 Leído por Sibella Denton
Mathematical Appendix, Part 1 14:49 Leído por Carl Manchester
Mathematical Appendix, Part 2 32:31 Leído por Carl Manchester