DEMAND AND EXCHANGE IN ECONOMIC ANALYSIS

Hardback

DEMAND AND EXCHANGE IN ECONOMIC ANALYSIS

A History from Cournot to Marshall

9781852785307 Edward Elgar Publishing
John Creedy, Wellington School of Business and Government, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand
Publication Date: March 1992 ISBN: 978 1 85278 530 7 Extent: 224 pp
Demand and Exchange in Economic Analysis provides a rare combination of detailed analysis of a central area of economics with the history of economic thought. The first part of the book examines major attempts to treat mathematically the partial equilibrium concept of demand conceived as a schedule. The second part, after generalizing Cournot’s model of trade in a single good, traces the general equilibrium analysis of exchange. This adds to the concept of a demand curve the fundamental interpretation of the rate of exchange, or price ratio, in terms of the amount of one good offered in return for a unit of another good. The similarity in the treatments of Mill, Whewell, Marshall and Walras is revealed along with the emphasis on multiple equilibria. Edgeworth’s grand synthesis and extension of Jevons’s approach to exchange is then discussed in detail. The book will be of interest to a wide range of economists interested in placing modern theory in historical perspective.

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Demand and Exchange in Economic Analysis provides a rare combination of detailed analysis of a central area of economics with the history of economic thought. The first part of the book examines major attempts to treat mathematically the partial equilibrium concept of demand conceived as a schedule. The second part, after generalizing Cournot''s model of trade in a single good, traces the general equilibrium analysis of exchange. This adds to the concept of a demand curve the fundamental interpretation of the rate of exchange, or price ratio, in terms of the amount of one good offered in return for a unit of another good. The similarity in the treatments of Mill, Whewell, Marshall and Walras is revealed along with the emphasis on multiple equilibria. Edgeworth''s grand synthesis and extension of Jevons''s approach to exchange is then discussed in detail. The book will be of interest to a wide range of economists interested in placing modern theory in historical perspective.
Critical Acclaim
‘The essays in this book display a high level of scholarship and technical competence. They certainly raise the quality of doctrinal history several notches.’
– David Collard, History of Economic Thought Newsletter

‘[Creedy] bestows his considerable analytical skills on Cournot, Mill, Whewell, Mangoldt, Jevons, Walras, Marshall and Edgeworth rather in the manner of a Samuelson without the bombast. No future work can now be done on these writers without taking account of Creedy.’
– The Manchester School
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