No question has more intrigued the minds of scholars of economic thought throughout history than that of the nature and meaning of time. The articles in this insightful collection attempt to provide satisfactory answers to fundamental issues on the use of time in economic theory. These volumes bring together the most important contributions on the subject, ranging from issues about the allocation of time, theory of choice, preference reversal and time in equilibrium to the issues of irreversibility, complex systems and the role of time.This comprehensive collection will be of great interest to researchers and students alike.
Les mer
These volumes bring together the most important contributions on the subject, ranging from issues about the allocation of time, theory of choice, preference reversal and time in equilibrium to the issues of irreversibility, complex systems and the role of time.
Les mer
Contents:
Volume I
Acknowledgements
Introduction Stefano Zamagni and Elettra Agliardi
PART I METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES ON TIME IN ECONOMICS
1. Randall Bausor (1983), âTime and the Structure of Economic Analysisâ
2. Fernando Carvalho (1984), âOn the Concept of Time in Shacklean and Sraffian Economicsâ
3. M. Dummett (1986), âCausal Loopsâ
4. N. Georgescu-Roegen (1971), âInstants of Time and Durationâ, âHysteresis and Historyâ, âTime and âTimeââ, âStocks and Flowsâ, âFunds and Servicesâ, and âEntropy and Economic Valueâ
5. Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen (1985), âTime and Value in Economics and in Gossenâs Systemâ
6. Derek Parfit (1984), âDifferent Attitudes to Timeâ
7. F.P. Ramsey (1928), âA Mathematical Theory of Savingâ
8. Paul A. Samuelson (1944), âThe Relation Between Hicksian Stability and True Dynamic Stabilityâ
9. G.L.S. Shackle (1958), âThe Complex Concept of Economic Timeâ
10. G.L.S. Shackle (1976), âTime and Choiceâ
11. Stephen Smale ([1977] 1980), âSome Dynamical Questions in Mathematical Economicsâ
12. Gordon C. Winston (1982), âEconomic Events in Timeâ
13. Gordon C. Winston (1988), âThree Problems with the Treatment of Time in Economics: Perspectives, Repetitiveness, and Time Unitsâ
14. Stefano Zamagni (1984), âRicardo and Hayek Effects in a Fixwage Model of Traverseâ
PART II TIME AND EQUILIBRIUM
15. Randall Bausor (1986), âTime and Equilibriumâ
16. Jean-Pierre Danthine (1978), âInformation, Futures Prices, and Stabilizing Speculationâ
17. GĂŠrard Fuchs and Guy Laroque (1976), âDynamics of Temporary Equilibria and Expectationsâ
18. Jean Michel Grandmont (1977), âTemporary General Equilibrium Theoryâ
19. Jean-Michel Grandmont (1985), âOn Endogenous Competitive Business Cyclesâ
20. Jerry R. Green (1973), âTemporary General Equilibrium in a Sequential Trading Model with Spot and Futures Transactionsâ
21. Sanford J. Grossman (1977), âThe Existence of Futures Markets, Noisy Rational Expectations and Informational Externalitiesâ
22. Frank H. Hahn and Takashi Negishi (1962), âA Theorem on Non-Tâtonnement Stabilityâ
23. Frank Hahn ([1989] 1990), âInformation Dynamics and Equilibriumâ
24. Roy Radner (1972), âExistence of Equilibrium of Plans, Prices, and Price Expectations in a Sequence of Marketsâ
25. Stephen Smale (1976), âDynamics in General Equilibrium Theoryâ
Name Index
Volume II
Acknowledgements
An introduction by the editors to all three volumes appears in Volume I
PART I TIME AND IRREVERSIBILITY
1. Olivier J. Blanchard and Lawrence H. Summers (1986), âHysteresis and the European Unemployment Problemâ
2. Christophe Chamley and Douglas Gale (1994), âInformation Revelation and Strategic Delay in a Model of Investmentâ
3. Avinash Dixit (1992), âInvestment and Hysteresisâ
4. Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen (1975), âBio-Economic Aspects of Entropyâ
5. Donald W. Katzner (2000), âEconomics and the Principle of Uniformityâ
6. Robert S. Pindyck (1991), âIrreversibility, Uncertainty, and Investmentâ
7. Jennifer F. Reinganum (1981), âMarket Structure and the Diffusion of New Technologyâ
8. Joan Robinson (1974), âHistory Versus Equilibriumâ
PART II TIME AND COMPLEX SYSTEMS
9. W. Brian Arthur (1988), âSelf-Reinforcing Mechanisms in Economicsâ
10. Lawrence Blume and David Easley (1992), âEvolution and Market Behaviorâ
11. William A. Brock (1991), âUnderstanding Macroeconomic Time Series Using Complex Systems Theoryâ
12. Paul A. David (1994), âWhy are Institutions the âCarriers of Historyâ?: Path Dependence and the Evolution of Conventions, Organizations and Institutionsâ
13. Steven N. Durlauf (1993), âNonergodic Economic Growthâ
14. Hans FĂśllmer (1974), âRandom Economies with Many Interacting Agentsâ
15. John Foster (1997), âThe Analytical Foundations of Evolutionary Economics: From Biological Analogy to Economic Self-Organizationâ
16. Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen (1977), âWhat Thermodynamics and Biology can Teach Economistsâ
17. Douglass C. North (1994), âEconomic Performance Through Timeâ
18. Michael Woodford (1989), âImperfect Financial Intermediation and Complex Dynamicsâ
PART III TIME AND âPARADOXESâ IN GAME THEORY
19. James W. Friedman (1971), âA Non-cooperative Equilibrium for Supergamesâ
20. Mordecai Kurz (1992), âUnderstanding the Past in Order to Assess the Future: On Learning Equilibrium Price Processesâ
21. Reinhard Selten (1978), âThe Chain Store Paradoxâ
22. Eric van Damme (1989), âStable Equilibria and Forward Inductionâ
Name Index
Volume III
Acknowledgements
An introduction by the editors to all three volumes appears in Volume I
PART I THE ALLOCATION OF TIME
A Theories of the Allocation of Time
1. William J. Baumol (1968), âOn the Social Rate of Discountâ
2. Gary S. Becker (1965), âA Theory of the Allocation of Timeâ
3. Jeff E. Biddle and Daniel S. Hamermesh (1990), âSleep and the Allocation of Timeâ
4. Reuben Gronau (1977), âLeisure, Home Production, and Work â the Theory of the Allocation of Time Revisitedâ
5. F. Thomas Juster and Frank P. Stafford (1991), âThe Allocation of Time: Empirical Findings, Behavioral Models, and Problems of Measurementâ
6. Robert A. Pollak and Michael L. Wachter (1975), âThe Relevance of the Household Production Function and Its Implications for the Allocation of Timeâ
7. David L. Wetzell (2002), âOn Some Unappreciated Implications of Beckerâs Time Allocation Model of Labor Supplyâ
8. Richard Zeckhauser (1973), âTime as the Ultimate Source of Utilityâ
B The Allocation of Time: Applications
9. Rudolf Andorka (1987), âTime Budgets and Their Usesâ
10. Dagfinn Ă
s (1978), âStudies of Time-Use: Problems and Prospectsâ
11. Corry Azzi and Ronald Ehrenberg (1975), âHousehold Allocation of Time and Church Attendanceâ
12. Alok Bhargava (1997), âNutritional Status and the Allocation of Time in Rwandese Householdsâ
13. Robert W. Fogel (1999), âCatching Up with the Economyâ
14. J. Gershuny (1995), âTime Budget Research in Europeâ [First prepared as J. Gershuny (1992), âTime Budget Research in Europeâ
15. Peter Kooreman and Arie Kapteyn (1987), âA Disaggregated Analysis of the Allocation of Time within the Householdâ
16. Tadashi Yamada, Tetsuji Yamada and J. Moonwon Kang (1999), âA Study of Time Allocation of Japanese Householdsâ
PART II TIME, PREFERENCE REVERSAL AND THE THEORY OF CHOICE
17. David E. Bell (1982), âRegret in Decision Making under Uncertaintyâ
18. David M. Grether and Charles R. Plott (1979), âEconomic Theory of Choice and the Preference Reversal Phenomenonâ
19. Jon Elster and George Loewenstein (1992), âUtility from Memory and Anticipationâ
20. Peter J. Hammond (1976), âChanging Tastes and Coherent Dynamic Choiceâ
21. Tjalling C. Koopmans (1964), âOn Flexibility of Future Preferenceâ
22. David M. Kreps (1979), âA Representation Theorem for âPreference for Flexibilityââ
23. Graham Loomes and Robert Sugden (1982), âRegret Theory: An Alternative Theory of Rational Choice Under Uncertaintyâ
24. Maurizio Mistri (2002), âAddiction and the Dynamic Inconsistency of Consumption Plansâ
25. Robert A. Pollak (1970), âHabit Formation and Dynamic Demand Functionsâ
26. Ian Steedman (2001), âConsumption Takes Timeâ
27. R.H. Strotz (1955), âMyopia and Inconsistency in Dynamic Utility Maximizationâ
28. Douglas Vickers (1981), âReal Time and the Choice-decision Point: A Comment on Findlay and Williamsâ âFinancial Theoryââ
Name Index
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781840649666
Publisert
2004-04-28
Utgiver
Vendor
Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
Høyde
244 mm
Bredde
169 mm
AldersnivĂĽ
G, U, P, 01, 05, 06
SprĂĽk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
1712