1st Edition

The Economics of Unemployment (Routledge Revivals)

By J. A. Hobson Copyright 2012
    160 Pages
    by Routledge

    160 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1922, Hobson’s study of the depression and resulting unemployment in the aftermath of the First World War is a far-sighted analysis which looks beyond the consequences of the war itself, at the root economic causes of the crisis.

    Dealing with issues such as the failure of consumption, trade fluctuations, the balance of spending and saving, and spiralling credit as factors which lay at the root of the depression, Hobson’s study is a document of considerable economic, social and historical value, which still has much to teach the modern reader, whether interested layperson or student of economics.

    1. A Limited Market  2. The Failure of Consumption  3. The Balance of Spending and Saving  4. The Psychology of trade Fluctuations  5. Surplus Income the Cause of Fluctuations  6. Wage Reduction as Remedy for Depression  7. Credit as a Factor in Fluctuations  8. The Douglas Theory  9. Replies to Criticism  10. A Summary

    Biography

    J. A. Hobson