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"Samuelson and Marx": Reply
The Consumer Does Benefit From Feasible Price Stability
The general overcompensated theorem, 476. — The Waugh time-symmetric case, 477. — Inapplicability of the Waugh theorem, 477. — The anti-Waugh theorem, 478. — Utility areas versus consumer surplus areas, 480. — Second-round discussion and the dual Waugh theorem, 483. — Third-round discussions: producer benefit from price instability? 487. — No perpetual motion machine of the third kind in economics, 488. — Conclusion, 493.
The Economics of Marx: An Ecumenical Reply
[The Consumer does Benefit from Feasible Price Stability]: Rejoinder
Rejoinder Get access Paul A. Samuelson Paul A. Samuelson Massachusetts Institute of Technology Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 86, Issue 3, August 1972, Pages 500–503, https://doi.org/10.2307/1880808 Published: 01 August 1972
Jacob Viner, 1892-1970
Paradoxes of Schumpeter's Zero Interest Rate
What Makes for a Beautiful Problem in Science?
[Professor Samuelson on Free Enterprise and Economic Inefficiency: A Comment]: Reply
Journal Article Professor Samuelson on Free Enterprise and Economic Inefficiency: Reply Get access Paul A. Samuelson Paul A. Samuelson Massachusetts Institute of Technology Search for other works by this author on: Oxford Academic Google Scholar The Quarterly Journal of Economics, Volume 84, Issue 2, May 1970, Pages 341–345, https://doi.org/10.2307/1883021 Published: 01 May 1970