1st Edition

The Macroeconomics of Malthus

By John Pullen Copyright 2021
280 Pages
by Routledge

280 Pages
by Routledge

280 Pages
by Routledge

The views of Thomas Robert Malthus (1766–1834) on population, first published in his Essay on the Principle of Population , 1798, continue to be hotly debated, either acclaimed or opposed, as do his views on macroeconomics. There is a widely held view that his macroeconomics lacks coherence and is merely a collection of isolated jottings. This book challenges this view; it... Read more
Introduction
I   Malthus’s methodology
II   Saving, investment, and consumption
III   Effective demand and effective supply
IV   Manufacturing, machinery, and inventions
V   Population growth and per capita economic growth
VI   Land, landlords, rent, and diminishing returns
VII   Labour and Wages
VIII   Capital, profits, interest, investment, and the wages- profits relation
IX   Say’s Law
X   Laissez-faire and government intervention. Private sector and public sector
XI   Unproductive labour and unproductive consumption
XII   Causes of growth and depression: Malthus’s theory and alternatives
XIII   Distribution, redistribution, and the balance between economic equality and economic inequality
XIV   Malthus and recent debates on economic inequality
XV   Conclusion

Biography

John Pullen is Adjunct Associate Professor at the University of New England, Armidale, New South Wales, Australia.

"Pullen provides a deep dive into Malthus’s writing and takes readers step by step through various topics central to modern macroeconomics. This is the book's great strength and makes the text particularly appealing to historians of economic thought."

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