1st Edition

The Growing Economy

By J. E. Meade Copyright 2009
    512 Pages
    by Routledge

    512 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this sequel to his widely praised classic study of The Stationary Economy, Nobel Prize winning economist J. E. Meade continues his systematic treatment of the entire fi eld of economic analysis. He uses a series of simplifi ed models designed to show the interconnections between various specialist fi elds of economic theory.The Growing Economy departs from the position of static equilibrium Meade assumes in The Stationary Economy. Here he deals with equilibrium growth. Meade introduces capital goods and allows for growth through capital accumulation, population expansion, and technical progress. He still assumes perfect competition and the absence of indivisibilities, so that there are constant returns to scale in the productive system and a given set of consistent and independent preferences for each consumer.In this volume, an attempt is made to discuss the theory of economic growth with a minimum of mathematical analysis. In the main text no diff erential or integral calculus is employed; such mathematical techniques are used (sparingly) only in footnotes and appendices, which the general reader may avoid. Meade's treatise off ers students and specialists alike a general survey of theory in a form that is assessable even for those with little mathematical training. He takes into account the dynamics of trade, increased demand, and new technology and their impact on growth. Th is book carries the discussion a long way from the harmonious quiet of the abstract model to the untidy, real world.

    I: The One-Product Model; I: Six Assumptions; II: Money, Prices, and Interest in the One-Product Model; III: Of Propdems, Plantcaps, and other States of Society; IV: The One-Product Model of Capitalistic Production; V: Changes in Standards of Living in Propdems and Plantcaps; VI: The State of Steady Growth: (1) Two Factors and No Technical Progress; VII: The State of Steady Growth: (2) A Third Factor and Technical Progress; VIII: The Level of Consumption in a State of Steady Growth; IX: The Determinants of Technical Progress; X: Demographic Adjustment; XI: Population Growth and the Standard of Living; XII: Savings: (1) Perfect Selfishness; XIII: Savings: (2) Perfect Altruism; XIV: From Propdem and Plantcap to Procap; II: The Many-Product Model; XV: Capitalistic Production with Many Products; XVI: Money, Prices, and Interest in a Many-Product Economy; XVII: The Stationary State; XVIII: Equilibrium Growth in a Competitive Economy; XIX: Planned Growth in a Socialist Economy; XX: A Four-Product Model; XXI: Risk, Uncertainty, and Enterprise; XXII: Three Methods of Reducing Risk and Uncertainty; XXIII: Efficiency and Distribution Revisited—Conclusion

    Biography

    J. E. Meade