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Excess Demand, Unemployment, Vacancies, and Wages

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1970 84(1), 1
I. A neoclassical macro theory for money wage changes, 2. — II. Neoclassical wage theory with spontaneous wage change and additional wage determinants, 3 — III. Vacancies and unemployment and excess demand, 5. — IV. The derivation of the Phillips relation, 8. — V. The form of the Phillips relation, 11. — VI. The cyclical characteristics of unemployment and vacancies, 17. — VII. Vacancies, unemployment, and equilibrium, 21.

Schumpeter and Max Weber: Comment

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1966 80(3), 488
Journal Article Schumpeter and Max Weber: Comment Get access Niles M. Hansen Niles M. Hansen University of Texas, University of Paris Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 80, Issue 3, August 1966, Pages 488–491, https://doi.org/10.2307/1880736 Published: 01 August 1966

Comment

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1955 69(4), 641
Journal Article Professor Hansen and Keynesian Interest Theory: Comment Get access Alvin H. Hansen Alvin H. Hansen Harvard University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 69, Issue 4, November 1955, Pages 641–643, https://doi.org/10.2307/1882002 Published: 01 November 1955

Classical, Loanable-Fund, and Keynesian Interest Theories

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1951 65(3), 429
Journal Article Classical, Loanable-Fund, and Keynesian Interest Theories Get access Alvin H. Hansen Alvin H. Hansen Harvard University Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 65, Issue 3, August 1951, Pages 429–432, https://doi.org/10.2307/1882223 Published: 01 August 1951

Institutional Frictions and Technological Unemployment

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1931 45(4), 684
I. The argument that labor-saving improvements release purchasing power and so reabsorb displaced labor, 684.— The fallacy in this argument, 686.— Circumstances under which the displaced labor will be reabsorbed, 687.— II. Effect of price reduction, 688; of restrictions upon credit and wage rates, 690.— III. Effect of price maintenance, 692; of lower interest rates, 693.— IV. The effect of universal monopoly upon unemployment, 696.— Quasi-monopoly control of prices contrasted with rigid control of wage-rates, 697.

The Technological Interpretation of History

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1921 36(1), 72
I. Marx's view of history is technological not economic. — II. The social process according to Marx, 75. — III. Technological changes, the class struggle and human adjustments to environment, 75. — IV. Forces lying back of technological evolution, according to Marx and Engels: extension of markets, development of science, cosmic evolution, 78. — V. The Marxian view against the background of fundamental factors and forces, 80. — VI. Criticism of the Marxian theory, 82. — VII. Conclusion, 83.

A Theoretical Analysis of Smuggling

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1973 87(2), 172 open access
I. Smuggling and welfare, 173. — II. Exogenously specified objectives: target increase in importable production, 184. — III. Overinvoicing and underinvoicing of transactions, 186. — IV. Conclusions, 187.