3664 Pages
    by Routledge

    Edwin Cannan, prodigious author and scholar whose name is inextricably linked with two great economic institutions, Adam Smith and the London School of Economics (LSE), probably had his greatest success as a professor. He nurtured a generation of scholars, teachers and writers at the LSE during his three decades as a dominant figure in economics there, from when the school opened in 1895 until the spring term of 1926 when he retired.
    Cannan was almost solely responsible for the gradual change of direction of the economic thought of the LSE from Marshallian economics to classical liberalism. For this he was very much admired; at his death the student paper wrote: 'His influence was truly remarkable. To the outside world, and to his students, whether specialists in economics or not, he typified the School'. Among other accomplishments throughout his life, Cannan contributed twenty-five entries to the original Palgrave's Dictionary of Poitical Economy and between 1895 and 1935 had sixty book reviews published in The Economic Journal.
    This collection brings together Cannon's major contributions to the theory of distribution, quantity theory and the definition of "Classical Economics" as well as touching on his life at a more personal level in the articles and reminiscences written by scholars and friends.

    Volume 1 Edwin Cannan: Liberal Doyen by Alan Ebenstein; Volume 2 Elementary Political Economy, The History of Local Rates in Britain: In Relation to the Proper Distribution of the Burden of Taxation; Volume 3 a History of the Theories of Production and Distribution in English Political Economy from 1776 to 1848; Volume 4 The Economic Outlook; Volume 5 Wealth: A Brief Explanation of the Causes of Economic Welfare; Volume 6 An Economist's Protest; Volume 7 Money: Its Connection with rising and Falling Prices, Modern Currency and the Regulation of its Value, Economic Scares; Volume 8 A Review of Economic Theory
    '...Simple presentation that never loses touch with concrete reality.' - Friedrich Hayek

    '...I'm a great admirer of Cannan...Cannan was a first-rate economist.' - Milton Friedman

    '...Nobody can peruse his lively short tracts on money and monetary policy without pleasure and profit.' - Joseph Schumpeter