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Davenport's Economics and the Present Problems of Theory

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1914 28(3), 417
I. Davenport's Economics is in the direct line of succession of the classical treatises on economics, 417. — II. The book essentially classical in scope and method, 419. — III. The chief departure from classical method in the greater significance ascribed to the entrepreneur, 422. — IV. Competing concepts of marginality: contradictions in Davenport's usage, 424. — V. Inadequacy of the concept of value as a mathematical ratio for the analysis of the problems of price and value of money, 430. — VI. Production identified with acquisition, 437. — Bearing of this amalgamation of concepts upon the problems of functional and personal distribution, 438. — VII. Social implications of Davenport's system of economic theory, 443.

Bernhard's unerwunschte folgen der deutschen sozialpolitik and Its Critics

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1914 28(3), 561
Journal Article Bernhard's Unerwünschte Folgen der Deutschen Sozialpolitik and its Critics Get access Lewis S. Gannett Lewis S. Gannett Berlin, Germany Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 28, Issue 3, May 1914, Pages 561–578, https://doi.org/10.2307/1884988 Published: 01 May 1914