1st Edition

Economic Phenomena Before and After War A Statistical Theory of Modern Wars

By Slavko Secerov Copyright 2003
    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    Economic Phenomena before and after War is the result of the author's search for a scientific explanation of modern wars, by means of economic statistical data, in the statistics of consumption, production and natural growth of population.
    The theory discussed assumes that a state of war in modern communities is dependent on the general economic equilibrium, which becomes more and more unstable as industrialization progresses. A state of war indicates a turning point in the action of balancing forces; it moves the economic forces in an opposite direction and is therefore a means for stabilizing the general economic equilibrium.

    1. Introduction 2. Equilibrium 3. Relation Between Economics And War In History 4. General Theory Of War Equilibrium 5. Natural Increase Of Population 6. The Rate Of Natural Increase And War-Equilibrium 7. Natural Increase Of Population 8. The Rate Of Natural Increase And War-Equilibrium Theory 9. The Law Of Increasing Wants 10. Growth Of Consumption 11. Consumption And War-Equilibrium Theory 12. Consumption Before The World-War 1914 13. The Disproportion In The Production Of Primary And Secondary Goods 14. The Slackening Of Commerce In Foodstuffs And The Disproportionate Rise Of Price 15. The Limits Of Extensive Cultivation And Of Geographical Expansion 16. The War Effects On The Production Of Primary Goods 17. General Summary 18. Bibliography

    Biography

    Secerov, Slavko