04786nam 2200637 450 991048091680332120170821161302.01-4832-6120-4(CKB)3710000000200569(EBL)1876864(SSID)ssj0001435365(PQKBManifestationID)11824064(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001435365(PQKBWorkID)11429308(PQKB)11157481(MiAaPQ)EBC1876864(EXLCZ)99371000000020056920150112h19741974 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrNations and households in economic growth essays in honor of Moses Abramovitz /edited by Paul A. David, Melvin W. Reder ; contributors, Kenneth J. Arrow [and seventeen others]New York, New York ;London, [England] :Academic Press,1974.©19741 online resource (428 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-322-47015-4 0-12-205050-9 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.Front Cover; Nations and Households in Economic Growth: Essays in Honor of Moses Abramovitz; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; List of Contributors; Preface; Part I: MicroeconomicFoundations; Chapter 1. The Measurement of Real Value Added; 1. Introduction; 2. Notation and Assumptions; 3. Method I: Estimation of the Production Function for Real Value Added; 4. Method I Modified: The Use of Duality Relations; 5. Method II: Estimation of the Production Function for Gross Outputand Measurement of Real Value Added from Output and Materials; 6. Time Series Observations; ReferencesChapter 2. Fortune, Risk, and the Microeconomics of MigrationPART I; 1. Some Higher Moments in the Life of Man: A Paradigm; 2. Eppur SiMuovono; PART II; 3. Movers and Searchers with Limited Means: A Formal Model; 4. Determinants of the Effective Demand for Investment inMigration and Search; PART III; 5. The Limits of Analogy; 6. Why Are the Shapes of Offer Distributions Different?; APPENDIX.On Sufficient Conditions for the Existence of a Unique Maximum Solution; References; Chapter 3. Does Economic Growth Improvethe Human Lot? Some Empirical Evidence1. The Concept and Measurement of Happiness2. The Evidence; 3. Interpretation; 4. Summary and Concluding Observations; References; Additional Bibliography; Chapter 3. Income-Related Differences in Natural Increase: Bearing on Growth and Distribution of Income; 1. Differences in Natural Increase among Income Classes; 2. Implications for Growth and Distribution of Income; 3. Summary; References; Chapter 4. An Economic Theory of Imperialism; 1. Political Favor as a Commodity; 2. Some Examples of Imperialist Behavior; 3. Alternative Theories of Imperialism; 4. Empirical Tests5. Policy ImplicationsReferences; Chapter 5. Does the Theory of Demand Need the Maximum Principle?; 1. Introduction; 2. The Role of Constraints in the Theory of Demand; 3. The Relationships between Changes in Constraints and Changes in Distributions; 4. Implications for Market Phenomena; 5. Extensions; 6. Conclusions; Appendix A. Proof of Statement 19; Appendix B. Proof of Statement 20; Appendix C. TechnicalNotes; References; Chapter 6. Are Men Rational or Economists Wrong?; 1. Money Illusion; 2. Time Illusion; 3. Effort Illusion; ReferencesPart II: MACROECONOMIC PERFORMANCE: GROWTH AND STABILITYChapter 7. Demand, Structural Change, and the Process of Economic Growth; 1. Introduction; 2. A Formal Model of Dualistic Development; 3. The Role of Demand in the Dualistic Economy; 4. Conclusions and Agenda for Future Research; Appendix A. Restatement of the Model in Per Capita Terms; Appendix B. Parameters and Initial Conditions for the Simulation Model; References; Chapter 8. Monetary Policy in Developing Countries; 1. Cyclical versus Secular Policy; 2. Monetary Policy and Inflation; 3. Inflation and Development4. Development without InflationNations and Households in Economic GrowthMicroeconomicsMacroeconomicsEconomic policyElectronic books.Microeconomics.Macroeconomics.Economic policy.330.1David Paul A.Reder Melvin Warren1919-Arrow Kenneth Joseph1921-MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910480916803321Nations and households in economic growth1120130UNINA