1st Edition

The Backward Art of Spending Money

By Wesley Mitchell Copyright 1937
502 Pages
by Routledge

504 Pages
by Routledge

500 Pages
by Routledge

Nearly 85 years ago, Wesley Clair Mitchell, the acknowledged leader of American economists during the first half of this century, wrote: "Important as the art of spending is, we have developed less skill in its practice than in the practice of making money. Common sense forbids our wasting dollars earned by irksome efforts; and yet we are notoriously extravagant. Ignorance of qualities,... Read more
The Backward Art of Spending Money and Other Essays; 1: The Backward Art of Spending Money 1; 2: Quantitative Analysis in Economic Theory 1; 3: Statistics and Government 1; 4: Institutes for Research in The Social Sciences 1; 5: Research in The Social Sciences 1; 6: The Social Sciences and National Planning 1; 7: Intelligence and The Guidance of Economic Evolution 1; 8: Making Goods and Making Money 1; 9: The Role of Money in Economic Theory 1; 10: Bentham’s Felicific Calculus 1; 11: Postulates and Preconceptions of Ricardian Economics 1; 12: Wieser’s Theory of Social Economics 1; 13: Sombart’s Hochkapitalismus 1; 14: Thorstein Veblen 1; 15: Commons on Institutional Economics 1; 16: The Prospects of Economics 1; 17: Economics 1904-1929 1; 18: Business Cycles

Biography

Wesley Clair Mitchell, Eli Ginzberg