04584oam 2200649I 450 991045240200332120200520144314.00-415-60736-11-315-01669-91-136-51366-310.4324/9781315016696 (CKB)2550000001128444(EBL)1460978(OCoLC)862048838(SSID)ssj0001161073(PQKBManifestationID)11752010(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001161073(PQKBWorkID)11126626(PQKB)10807752(MiAaPQ)EBC1460978(Au-PeEL)EBL1460978(CaPaEBR)ebr10781102(CaONFJC)MIL529078(OCoLC)860711205(EXLCZ)99255000000112844420180706e20031959 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrIntroduction to the world economy /A.J. Brown[Second edition].Oxon [England] :Routledge,2003.1 online resource (215 p.)Routledge library editions. Economics. International economics ;IIFirst published in 1959.0-415-31357-0 1-299-97827-4 Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Original Title Page; Original Copyright Page; PREFACE; Table of Contents; 1 ECONOMIES AND THEIR OUTCOMES; What an economy is; On studying an economy; What economies provide; The difficulties of comparison; 2 THE ESSENTIALS OF AN ECONOMY; The vital processes, production, consumption, and investment; Wealth, factors of production, and growth; How is it organized?; 3 THE FLOWS OF MONEY; The circular flow; Money flow as a measure of income; Money payments and the money supply; 4 HIGH AND LOW PRODUCTIVITY; Farm incomes and decreasing returnsManufacture and mechanismThe conditions of mechanization; Coolies, ships, and services; Why prices matter, too; 5 WHAT DETERMINES PRICES?; The free markets; Control schemes; Manufactured goods; The price of labour; The general level of prices; The terms of trade; 6 GOOD AND POOR LIVINGS; Productivity, prices, and incomes; The mutual influence of incomes; Inequality within the economy; 7 HOW ECONOMIES GROW; The products of the great powers; The growth of population; Technical progress and knowledge; Capital and income; The supply of savings; Capital from abroad; 8 THE BALANCE OF OCCUPATIONSFarm population and productivityIncome and diet; Income and the non-agricultural occupations; 9 THE ROOTS OF SPECIALIZATION; Degrees of self-sufficiency; Large-scale production and local specialization; The distribution of resources; The use of resources; The distribution of population; The distribution of the conditions of progress; The effects of transport; A general view of localization; 10 THE PATTERN OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE; The growth of trade; The decline of international complementarity; Trade barriers; The changing composition of tradeIndustrialization and the basis of the trade patternThe part of multilateral exchange; 11 THE HAZARDS OF ECONOMIC LIFE; Natural causes; Technology, taste, and competition; The mechanism of depression; Some case-studies in depression; Causes and interactions; The hazards of inflation; 12 THE ORGANIZATION OF THE WORLD ECONOMY; The end of laissez faire; The United Nations Organization and its agencies; Regional arrangements; The next tasks; INDEXWell constructed and thoroughly competent""</> - <STRONG>The Economist</STRONG><BR> ""It is refreshingly differentThe new-comer to economics who studies this book should find it an interesting and invigorating task"" - Economic Journal</><BR> This book introduces readers to some of the salient features and problems of the world economy and gives some indication of the main ways in which economists set about the task of analyzing them.<BR> After a general account of what economies are and how they work, the book's discussion develops with reference to broad statistical facts in relation to the Routledge library editions.Economics.International economics ;2.EconomicsElectronic books.Economics.215Brown A. J(Arthur Joseph),930546MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910452402003321Introduction to the world economy2093186UNINA