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This book examines the interrelations between Russian and European economics from the early 19th century to the present. It analyzes how Western economic thinking, such as classical economics and the marginal revolution, influenced Russian economic thinking and how Western economic ideas were modified and adapted to better reflect the specific Russian circumstances of the time. Moreover, the contributions in this book show how these modified ideas also influenced Western economists at the end of the 19th century, when Russian economics had reached the stage of professionalism and joined the international discourse on the discipline.
Written by an international selection of respected experts, this book provides an overview of the most influential Russian economists and covers a wide range of topics such as the marginal revolution, the specific influence of Marxism, the evolution of mathematics and statistics in Russia in the 1890s1920s, and the unique experience of building a planned economy in the Soviet Union. It is intended for all scholars and students who are interested in the history of economic thought.
Studies the interrelations between Western and Russian economic thought Provides an overview of the most influential Russian economists Covers topics such as the marginalist revolution and the special influence of Marxism
Auteur
Vladimir Avtonomov is a Distinguished Professor and Head of the Research Group in History and Methodology of Economics at the National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow (NRU HSE), Russia. He is also Department Head of the Primakov Institute of World Economy and International Relations at the Russian Academy of Sciences (IMEMO RAN), a Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, and serves on the editorial boards of the European Journal of History of Economic Thought and several Russian economic journals. He is Editor-in-Chief of the almanac "Istoki" (The Sources). He has been awarded the Varga Prize by the Russian Academy of Sciences.
Harald Hagemann is a Professor Emeritus of Economic Theory at the University of Hohenheim, Stuttgart, Germany. He is also a Life Member of Clare Hall, University of Cambridge, Honorary Past President of the European Society for the History of Economic Thought (ESHET), and Honorary Chairman of the Keynes-Gesellschaft.
Contenu
Chapter 1. The Transfer of Economic Ideas between Russia and the West: an Introduction (Vladimir Avtonomov).- Chapter 2. West-Russia-West: early interactions in economic thought. Cases of Storch and Chernyshevsky (Vladimir Avtonomov).- Chapter 3. Tugan-Baranovsky and the West (François Allisson).- Chapter 4. The circular flow of ideas: Vladimir K. Dmitriev (Christian Gehrke).- Chapter 5. Ladislaus von Bortkiewicz: Traveller between worlds (Christian Gehrke),- Chapter 6. Peter B. Struve as economist: philosophical foundations of economics and development theory (Günther Chaloupek).- Chapter 7. Bazarov, Bogdanov and the West (Elizaveta Burina).- Chapter 8. Lenin's development economics: an outline (Denis Melnik).- Chapter 9. Russia-West-Russia: Georg von Charasoff, the humane economy, and the critique of Marx's theory of history (Christian Gehrke).- Chapter 10. Eugen (Evgeny Evgenievich) Slutsky (Jean-Sebastien Lenfant).-Chapter 11. Feldman and the Strategy for Economic Growth (Harald Hagemann).- Chapter 12. Chayanov: The Reception of An Early Soviet Agricultural Economist (Carol Scott Leonard).- Chapter 13. N. D. Kondratiev and a New Methodological Agenda for Economics (Natalia Makasheva).- Chapter 14. Jacob Marschak: From a Russian revolutionist to President-elect of the American Economic Association (Robert W. Dimand).- Chapter 15. Simon Kuznets and Russia: An Uneasy Relationship (Moshe Syrquin).- Chapter 16. Alexander Gerschenkron (Andrey Belykh).- Chapter 17. Wassily Leontief and his German period (Harald Hagemann).- Chapter 18. Paul Baran (John King).- Chapter 19. Evsey Domar and Russia (Mauro Boianovsky).- Chapter 20. Leonid Kantorovich (Michael Ellman).
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