Paul Samuelson and the Foundations of Modern Economics

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Paul Anthony Samuelson, Karigirappa Puttaswamaiah
Transaction Publishers - Business & Economics - 265 pages

Paul A. Samuelson was the first American Nobel Laureate in economics, and the second overall. He was credited for "the scientific work through which he has developed static and dynamic economic theory and actively contributed to raising the level of analysis in economic science." That recognition is now thirty years old and Samuelson remains at work in the cutting edge of the discipline. He is also widely known for a basic textbook that became a landmark learning tool throughout the second half of the twentieth century. This excellent collegial appreciation focuses heavily on Samuelson's Foundations of Economic Analysis. In that work, and a series of brief essays, he has contributed to an integration of statics and dynamics by way of the correspondence principle. He has also combined the multiplier and accelerator mechanisms in a model of economic fluctuations; he has reformed the foundations of consumption theory by his concept of revealed preferences; he has developed or improved several major theorems within international trade; and created theories of maximum efficiency and maximum growth rate. Finally, he has clarified the role of collective goods in resource allocation. In considering the work and life of Samuelson, editor Puttaswamaiah, has assembled a worthy group of brilliant commentators. Among the analytic papers in this volume are "An essay on the Accuracy of Economic Prediction" by L.R. Klein, "Analytical Aspects of Anti-Inflation Policy" by Robert M. Solow, a paper by Vittorangelo Orati on Samuelson's linkage to Schumpeter and Keynes, "Money and Price Theory by Carlo Benetti and Jean Cartelier, and a concluding essay on "The Role of Samuelson's Economics" by Michael Emmett Brady. Most unusual in works of this kind are some strong critical statements, including a pungent examination of vanity as well as creativity in Samuelson's work. What emerges is a clear picture of a special scholar. Scholars and students will welcome it alike-a result that well fits the purpose and character of Samuelson. The festschrift has its origins in several issues of the International Journal of Applied Economics and Econometrics. Professor K. Puttaswamaiah has more than three decades of editing journals in economics. He is a member of the journal; Savings and Development issued at the University of Milan. He is author of Economic Development of Karnataka, Cost-Benefit Analysis, and Nobel Economists: Lives and Contributions.

 

Contents

Contributions of Paul A Samuelson
1
An Essay on the Accuracy of Economic Prediction
29
Analytical Aspects of AntiInflation Policy After 40 Years
71
Kreislauf and Great Aggregates The Missing link in the Work of Professor Samuelson Or In Search of Lost Dynamics
79
Generalising Tableau Economique Isnards Systeme Des Richesses
121
The Neoclassical Classical Fallacy
147
General NonSubstitution Theorem along Samuelsonian Lines
171
Samuelson the Vain
181
Money and Price Theory
203
Samuelson A Personal Recollection
225
Monotone Price Movements A NonEuclidean Approach
229
The Role of Samuelsons Economics in the Production of Keynesian Economist
241
Contributors
254
Annex
255
Index
262
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Page 2 - Professor Samuelson's extensive production, covering nearly all areas of economic theory, is characterized by an outstanding ability to derive important new theorems, and to find new applications for existing ones. By his many contributions, Samuelson has done more than any other contemporary economist to raise the level of scientific analysis in economic theory.

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