History
of Economics: Theories of Credit and Finance
(Bibliography)
Last update
V/3/2005
Please contact us at dismalscience@narod.ru
for further information.
I. FAMOUS ECONOMISTS ON
FINANCIAL MARKETS:
CONTEMPORARY
RECONSTRUCTIONS AND INTERPRETATIONS
A. SMITH
***
1. Anderson, G. M., Tollison, R. D. (1982) Adam Smith's Analysis of
Joint-Stock Companies Journal of Political Economy 90 (6): 1237-56
2. Diatkine, S., Rosier, M. (1999) Steuart and Smith on Banking Systems and Growth. Studies in the History of Economics 26: 218-234
3. Gherity,
G.A. (1994) The Evolution of Adam Smith's Theory of Banking. History of
political economy 26 (3): 423-441
4. Henderson, J. P.
(1986) Agency or Alienation? Smith, Mill, and Marx on the
Joint-Stock Company. History of Political Economy 18 (1): 111-31
5. Hollander, S. (1999)
Jeremy Bentham and Adam Smith on the Usury Laws: A 'Smithian' Reply to Bentham and a
New Problem. European Journal of the History of Economic Thought 6 (4): 523-51
6. Jadlow,
J. M. (1977) Adam Smith on Usury Laws. Journal of Finance 32(4): 1195-1200
7. Juniper,
J. (2000) 'A Genealogy of Short-Termism in Capital
Markets'. CoBAR Working Paper 2000-03
8. Laidler,
D. (1981) 'Adam Smith as a monetary economist'. Canadian journal of economics
XIV (2): 185-200
9. Levy, D. M. (1987)
Adam Smith's Case for Usury Laws. History of Political Economy 19 (3):
387-400
10. Niehans,
J. (1997) 'Adam Smith and the Welfare Cost of Optimism'. History of political
economy 29 (2): 185-200
11. Ortmann, A. (1999) The Nature and
Causes of Corporate Negligence, Sham Lectures, and Ecclesiastical Indolence:
Adam Smith on Joint-Stock Companies, Teachers, and Preachers History of
Political Economy 31 (2): 297-315
12. Paganelli, M.P. (2003) In Medio
Stat Virtus: An Alternative View of Usury in Adam
Smith's Thinking History of Political Economy 35 (1): 21-48
13. Perlman, M. (1989) Adam Smith and the Paternity of the
Real Bills Doctrine. History of Political Economy 21 (1): 77-90
14. Skaggs, N.T.
(1999) Adam Smith on Growth and Credit: Too Weak a Connection?. Journal of Economic Studies 26 (6): 481-496
K. MARX
***
1. Bellofiore,
R. (1998) Marx's Theory of Money and Credit Revisited: A Comment on the
Chapters by Suzanne De Brunhoff and Ferdinando Meacci. Marxian
economics: A reappraisal: Essays on Volume III of Capital. Volume
1. Method, value and money: 205-15
3.
5. Cohen, A. (1995) 'Divided
capitalism and Marx's concept of politics'. Political studies XLIII: 92-104
7. Crotty,
J. (1987) The Role of Money and Finance in Marxs Crisis Theory. The
Imperiled Economy Book 1: Macroeconomics from a Left Perspective: 71-81
8. De Brunhoff, S. (1990) Fictitious Capital. The New Palgrave: Marxian Economics. John Eatwell,
9. De Brunhoff, S. (1998) Money, Interest and Finance in Marxs
Capital Marxian Economics: A Reappraisal Essays on Volume III of Capital:
Volume 1: Method, Value and Money: 176-88
10. Eltis, W. (1991) Marx on the Unproductiveness of the
Financial Sector and Its Tendency to Grow Marx and modern economic analysis. Volume 2. The future of capitalism and the history of
thought: 129-46.
11. Fan-Hung
(1939-1940) Keynes and Marx on the Theory of Capital Accumulation, Money and
Interest. Review of Economic Studies 7: 28-41
12. Fine, B. (1985-86)
Banking Capital and the Theory of Interest. Science & Society 49(4):
387-413
13. Foley, D. (1997)
Credit and Fictitious Capital. A Dictionary of Marxist Thought, 2nd
edition. Tom Bottomore
(ed.): 115-116
14. Hein, E. (2002) 'Money, Interest and Capital Accumulation in Karl Marx's Economics: A Monetary Interpretation'. WSI-Diskussionspapier, Nr. 102
15. Keen, S. (1996) The Chaos of Finance: The Chaotic and Marxian Foundations of
Minsky's "Financial Instability
Hypothesis.". Economies et Societes
30 (2-3): 55-82
16. Lapavitsas C. (1997) Two Approaches to the Concept of
Interest-Bearing Capital. International Journal of Political Economy 27 (1):
85-106
17. Lianos, T.P. (1987) Marx on the Rate of Interest. Review
of Radical Political Economy 19 (3): 34-55
18. Meacci, F. (1998) Fictitious Capital and Crises. Marxian
Economics: A Reappraisal Essays on Volume III of Capital: Volume 1: Method,
Value and Money: 189-204
19. Moore, B. J.
(1991) Marx, Keynes, Kalecki and Kaldor
on the Rate of Interest as a Monetary Phenomenon. Nicholas Kaldor
and mainstream economics: Confrontation or convergence?:
225-42
21. Panico, C. (1980) Marxs Analysis of the Relationship Between The Rate of Interest and the Rate of Profits.
22. Panico, C. (1988) Marx on the Banking Sector and the
Interest Rate. Science and Society 52 (2): 310-25
24. Perelman, M. (1990)
The Phenomenology of Constant Capital and Fictitious Capital. Review of
Radical Political Economics 22 (2-3): 66-91
25. Plasmeijer, H. W. (1998) Marx on the Natural Rate of
Interest: Did Marx Hold a Monetary Theory of Income Distribution?. Marxian economics: A reappraisal: Essays on Volume III of
Capital. Volume 1. Method, value and money: 233-53
26. Reuten, G. (2002) The Rate of
Profit Cycle and the Opposition between Managerial and Finance Capital. A
Discussion of Capital III, Part Three to Five. The
Culmination of Capital. Essays on Volume III of Marxs Capital: 174-211
27. Ricciardi, J. (1987) Rereading Marx on the Role of Money
and Finance in Economic Development: Political Perspectives on Credit from the
1840s and 1850s. Research in Political Economy, Volume 10: 61-81.
28. Sardoni, C. (1998) Marx's Theory of Money and Interest: A Reconsideration in the Light of Robertson and Keynes.
Marxian economics: A reappraisal: Essays on Volume III of Capital. Volume 1. Method, value and money: 271-85
29. Schefold, B. (1998) The Relation
between the Rate of Profit and the Rate of Interest: A Reassessment after the
Publication of Marx's Manuscript of the Third Volume of Das
Kapital. Marxian economics: A reappraisal: Essays on
Volume III of Capital. Volume 1. Method, value and
money: 127-44
30. Shaikh, A. (1989) Accumulation, Finance, and Effective
Demand in Marx, Keynes, and Kalecki. Financial
dynamics and business cycles: New perspectives: 65-86
32. Shuklian, S. (1991). Marx on Credit,
Interest and Financial Instability.
Review of Social Economy 49(2): 196-217.
see also ECONOMARX:
Money and
value; Credit; Bank; Finance (theory); Crises,
Depressions (3) Money, Finance
see also Conference
Marx's Theory of Money: Modern Appraisals (
R. HILFERDING
***
1. Brewer, A. (1990)
Marxist Theories of Imperialism, a Critical Survey. (second,
revised edition).
2. Brewer, A. (1983)
Review of Finance Capital. Economica 50: 102-103
4. Harris, L. (1988)
Alternative Perspectives on the Financial System. New perspectives on the
financial system: 7-35
8. Pinto, N.P.A.(1998) 'Finance Capital Revisited'. Marxian Economics: A
Reappraisal, vol. 1: 216-232
9. Zoninsein,
J. (2000) Rudolf Hilferding's Theory of Financial
Capitalism and Today's World Financial Markets. The theory of capitalism in
the German economic tradition: Historism, ordo-liberalism, critical theory, solidarism: 275-304
see also Lovink, G. (2001) Finance and Economics after the Dotcom
Crash. Interview with Doug Henwood.
T. VEBLEN
***
1. Bolbol,
A. A. and M. A. Lovewell (2001) Three views on stock
markets and corporate behavior: Tobin, Veblen, and
Marx Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, Vol. 23 Issue 3: 527-544.
2. Cornhels, J. (2004) 'Veblen's Theory of Finance Capitalism and Contemporary Corporate America'. Journal of Economic Issues. Vol. 38 Issue 1: 29-58
3. Dimand R.W. (2004) Echoes of Veblens Theory of Business Enterprise in the Later Development of Macroeconomics: Fishers Debt-Deflation Theory of Great Depressions and the Financial Instability Theories of Minsky and Tobin. International Review of Sociology - Revue Internationale de Sociologie, Vol. 14, No. 3: 461-470.
4. Dirlam,
J. B. (1958) The Place of Corporation Finance in Veblen's
Economics. Thorstein Veblen:
A Critical Reappraisal: 113-128.
5. Ganley, W.T. (2004) The Theory of Business Enterprise and Veblens Neglected Theory of Corporation Finance. Journal of Economic Issues. Vol. 38 Issue 2: 397-403
6. Hake, E. R. (1998) Financial Innovation as Facilitator of Merger Activity. Journal of Economic Issues 32 (1): 145-170
7. Hake, E. R. (2004) 'The Appearance
of Impairment: Veblen and Goodwill-Financed Mergers'. Journal of Economic Issues. Vol. 38
Issue 2: 389-395
8. Kelso, P.R. and
B.L. Duman (1992) A Veblenian
View of Minsky's Financial Crisis Theory
International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 19 Issue 10-12: 222-235.
9. Lawson, C., and L. L.
Lawson. (1990) Financial System Restructuring: Lessons from Veblen, Keynes, and Kalecki. Journal of Economic Issues. Vol. 24 Issue 1: 115-132.
10. Medlen,
G. (2003) Veblen's Q - Tobin's Q. Journal of
Economic Issues 37 (4): 967-986
11. Phillips, R.J.
(1988) Veblen and Simons on Credit and Monetary
Reform. Southern Economic Journal, Vol. 55 Issue 1: 171-182
12. Raines, J. P. and
C. G. Leathers (1992) Financial Innovations and Veblen's
Theory of Financial Markets. Journal of Economic Issues, Vol. 26 Issue 2:
433-441.
13. Raines, J. P. and
C. G. Leathers (1996) Veblenian Stock Markets and
the Efficient Markets Hypothesis. Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, Vol. 19
Issue 1: 137-152
14. Raines, J. P. and
C. G. Leathers (2000) Stock Markets In Veblen's
Theory Of Business
J. A. SCHUMPETER
***
1. Arena, R. (1999) Banks, Credit, and the Financial System in
Schumpeter: An Interpretation. The legacy of Joseph A.
Schumpeter. Volume 2: 117-27
5. Earley, J. S. (1994) Joseph Schumpeter: A
Frustrated "Creditist". New perspectives
in monetary macroeconomics: Explorations in the tradition of Hyman P. Minsky: 337-51
6. Festre, A. (2002) 'Money, banking and
dynamics: two Wicksellian routes from Mises to Hayek and Schumpeter'. The American Journal of
Economics and Sociology 61 (2): 439-480
7. King, R. G. and R. Levine (1993) Finance and Growth: Schumpeter
Might Be Right. Quarterly Journal of Economics. Vol.
108 Issue 3: 717-38.
8. King, R. G. and R. Levine (1993) Finance, Entrepreneurship, and
Growth: Theory and Evidence. Journal of Monetary Economics 32 (3): 513-42
9. Lakomski, O. (2005) 'Money and Credit in Schumpeter and Hawtrey'. Mimeo NEW!
10. Messori, M. (2002) Credit and Money in Schumpeter's Theory, Mimeo
13. Raines, J. P. (2002) 'Financial innovations in Schumpeter's theory
of economic development and business cycles'. Paper presented at HES
Conference,
J. M. KEYNES
***
1. Arena, R. and Raybaut, A. (1998) Credit and Financial Markets in
Keynes's Conception of Endogenous Business Cycles: An Interpretation. Non-linear dynamics and endogenous cycles. Lecture Notes in Economics
and Mathematical Systems, vol. 463: 147-61
3. Davidson P. (1990)
Shackle and Keynes vs. Rational Expectations Theory on the Role of Time,
Liquidity, and Financial Markets Unkowledge and
Choice in Economics: ???-???
4. Dimand R.W. and H.Hagemann (2004) Keyness Q, Myrdals Q, and Tobins q. Paper presented at CEA 38th Annual Meetings
6. Lawlor,
M. S. (1997) Keynes and Financial Market Processes in Historical Context: From
the Treatise to The General Theory. Essays in honour of Geoff Harcourt.
Volume 1. Capital controversy, post-Keynesian
economics and the history of economic thought: 235-48
7. Lawlor,
M. S. (1994) On the Historical Origin of Keynes's Financial Market Views
History of Political Economy Vol. 26, Suppl.:
184-225.
8. Mott, T., and C.
Grainger (1995). The Role of the Rentier
in Keynes's and Kalecki's Conceptions of Capitalism.
Social Concept. Vol. 7: 83-105.
9. Nardozzi,
G. (1998) 'The Relevance of Keynes's Thought on Financial Markets'. Economic Theory and Social Justice. G. Gandolfo
and F. Marzano (eds.): 176-187
10. Raines, J. P. and
C. G. Leathers (2000) Keynes on Speculative Stock Markets. Economists and the
Stock Market: Speculative Theories of Stock Market Fluctuations: ???-???
M. KALECKI
***
1. Asimakopulos,
A. (1983) Kalecki and Keynes on finance, investment
and saving.
2. Messori,
M. (1991), Financing in the Kalecki's theory.
Cambridge Journal of Economics, Vol.15, n.3, 301-13
3. Mott, T. (1985-86)
Toward a post-Keynesian Formulation of Liquidity Preference. Journal of Post
Keynesian Economics, 8 (2): 222-232
5. Sawyer, M. (1985)
The Economics of Michal Kalecki
I. FISHER
***
1. Dimand,
R. W. (1994). Irving Fisher's Debt-Deflation Theory of Great
Depressions. Review of Social Economy 52, 92-107.
2. King, M. (1994)
Presidential Address: Debt Deflation: Theory and Evidence. European Economic
Review 38: 419-445.
3. McGrattan,
E.R., and
4. Pavanelli,
G. (2001) The Great Depression In Irving Fishers
Thought Mimeo
5. Wolfson,
M. (1996) Irving Fishers Debt-Deflation Theory: Its Relevance to Current
Conditions.
F. von HAYEK
***
2. Bernard, H. and J. Bisignano (2001) Bubbles And
Crashes: Hayek And Haberler Revisited Research in
Financial Services. Vol. 13: 3-40
5. O'Driscoll,
G. P. (1994) An evolutionary approach to banking and money. Hayek,
Co-ordination and Evolution: His Legacy in Philosophy, Politics, Economics and
the History of Ideas. J. Birner and R. van Zijp (eds.): 126-137
6. Pausor,
Jr. E.C. (1989) 'The Efficient-Markets Hypothesis and Enterpreneurship'.
Review of Austrian Economics 3: 95-107
7. Witt, U. (1997) The Hayekian Puzzle: Spontaneous Order and The Business
Cycle. Scottish Journal of Political Economy Vol 44
(1): 44-58
see also The Friedrich Hayek
Scholars' Page (Research Resources)
II. HISTORY OF
FINANCIAL ECONOMICS
1. Bernstein P.L.
(1992) Capital Ideas: The Improbable Origins of Modern Wall Street.
3. Fama, E.
(1991) Efficient Capital Markets: II. Journal of Finance 46 (5): 1575-1617
4.
5.
6. Goetzmann,
W.N. (2003) Fibonacci and the Financial Revolution NBER Working Paper #10352
7. Jovanovic,
F., and P. Le Gall (2001) Does God Practice a RandomWalk?
The Financial Physics of a French 19th Century Pioneer, Jules Regnault. European Journal for the History of Economic
Thought 8 (3): 332362
8. Jovanovic,
F. and P. Le Gall (2001) March to numbers. The statistical
style of Lucien March. History of Political Economy History of
Political Economy, 33 (5): 86-100.
9. Jovanovic,
F. (2003) 'Fama's Work during the 1960s on the
history of financial theory'. Paper presented at History of Economics Society
Annual Meeting,
10. Keen, S. (2001)
Debunking Economics: The Naked Emperor of the Social Sciences.
12. Miller, M. H.
(1999) The History of Finance. Journal of Portfolio Management 25 (4): 95-101
13. Nichols, N.A.
(1993) Efficient? Chaotic? What's the new finance?. Harvard Business Review 71 (2): 50-56
14. Poitras, G. (ed.) (2005 & 2006 forthcoming) 'Pioneers of Financial Economics' Edward Elgar Publishing
1. Contributions Prior to Irving Fisher
INTRODUCTION (Poitras, J.) PART I: The Historical and Philosophical Background Chapter 1 The Late-Medieval Origins of the Modern Financial Revolution (Munro, J.) Chapter 2 Business Ethics, Commercial Mathematics and the Rise of Mathematical Probability (Sylla, E.) Chapter 3 Dutch Trading Companies from the 16th to 18th Centuries (Jonker, J.) PART II: From Jan de Witt to Richard Price Chapter 4 The Valuation of Life Annuities: de Witt, Halley and de Moivre (Poitras, J.) Chapter 5 Joseph de la Vega and the Confusion de Confusiones (Cardoso, J.) Chapter 6 John Law and the Mississippi Scheme (Murphy, A.) Chapter 7 The Writings of Richard Price on Actuarial Science and Finance (Pradier, P.-C.) PART III: From Adam Smith to Louis Bachelier Chapter 8 The Contribution of Adam Smith to Financial Economics (Groenewegen, P.) Chapters 9 and 10 The French School: Jules Regnault and Henri Lefevre (Jovanovic, F. & P. LeGall) Chapter 11 W.S. Jevons (Maas,H.) PART IV: Early 20th century contributions Chapter 12 Louis Bachelier (Dimand, R.) Chapter 13 Early contributors to Financial Management: William Lough, Edward Meade and William Ripley (Witzel, M.)
2. From Irving Fisher to Fischer Black
FOREWORD (Rubinstein, M.) OVERVIEW (Poitras, J.) PART I: Possible Approaches to Financial Economics Chapter 1 Old Finance, Modern Finance and New Finance (McGoun, E.G.) Chapter 2 Benjamin Graham and Traditional Finance (Dimand, R.) Chapter 3 The Early Dow theorists: Charles Dow and William Peter Hamilton (Goetzmann, W.) PART II: The Roots of Modern Finance Chapter 4 Irving Fisher (Dimand, R.) Chapter 5 J.B. Williams and Discounted Cash Flow Analysis (Bierman, H.) Chapter 6 Macaulay, Redington and the Roots of Fixed Income Analysis (Poitras, G.) PART III: The Modern Finance Revolution Chapter 7 H. Markowitz and W. Sharpe (Ziemba, W.) Chapters 8 Attacking the Old Finance: The Modiglianit-Miller Theorems (Rubinstein, M.) Chapter 9 The Efficient Markets Hypothesis (Davidson, P.) PART IV: The Evolution of Modern Finance Chapter 10 Fischer Black and the Derivative Securities Revolution (Petzel, T.E.) Chapter 11 The Rise of Behavioral Finance (Shefrin, H.) Chapter 12 Technical Analysis, Ergodicity and Modern Finance (Poitras, J.)
15. Poitras, G. (2004) Security Analysis and Investment
Strategy.
16. Poitras, G. (2000) The Early
History of Financial Economics, 1478-1776: From Commercial Arithmetic to Life
Annuities and Joint Stocks.
(Chapter 2; Chapter 3; Chapter 8; Chapter 10; Chapter 11; All the other chapters and the Bibliography)
17. Pratten, C. (1993) The Stock
Market.
19. Rubinstein, M. 'Great
Moments in Financial Economics Series' in Journal of Investment Management (
21. Toporowski, J. (2001) 'El factor critico de las finanzas en la economia del siglo XX (The Critical Factor of Finance in the Economics of the Twentieth Century. With English summary)' Momento Economico 113 (Jan.-Feb.): 2-15
22. Toporowski, J. (April 2005 forthcoming) 'Theories Of Financial Disturbance. An Examination of Critical Theories of Finance from Adam Smith to the Present Day'. Edward Elgar Publishing
(Introduction Part I: A Premonition of Financial Fragility 1. Adam Smiths Economic Case Against Usury 2. The Vindication of Finance Part II: Critical Theories of Finance in the Twentieth Century: Unstable Money and Finance 3. Thorstein Veblen and Those Captains of Finance 4. Rosa Luxemburg and the Marxist Subordination of Finance 5. Ralph Hawtrey and the Monetary Business Cycle 6. Irving Fisher and Debt Deflation 7. John Maynard Keyness Financial Theory of Under-Investment I: Towards Doubt 8. John Maynard Keyness Financial Theory of Under-Investment II: Towards Uncertainty Part III: Critical Theories of Finance in the Twentieth Century: In the Shadow of Keynes 9. The Principle of Increasing Risk I: Marek Breit 10. The Principle of Increasing Risk II: Michal Kalecki 11. The Principle of Increasing Risk III: Michal Kalecki and Josef Steindl on Profits and Finance 12. A Brief Digression on Later Developments in Economics and Finance 13. The East Coast Historians: John Kenneth Galbraith, Charles P. Kindleberger, and Robert Shiller 14. Hyman P. Minskys Financial Instability Hypothesis 15. Conclusion: The Disturbance of Economists by Finance Bibliography Index )
see also Finance Theory (THE HISTORY OF ECONOMIC THOUGHT
WEBSITE)
Efficient Markets Hypothesis
(Definition, History, Bibliography)
Behavioural
Finance (Bibliography, Papers, Links)
III. CONTEMPORARY HETERODOX THEORIES OF
FINANCIAL MARKETS
1. Post Keynesian View of Financial Markets
***
1. Andresen
T. (2001) 'Overvaluation - not volatility - is the main danger in stock
markets'. Mimeo
2. Arestis,
P. (1988) 'Post-Keynesian Theory of Money, Credit and Finance'. Post-Keynesian
Monetary Economics,
4. Arestis,
P., Demetriades, P. and Luintel,
K. (2001) 'Financial Development and Economic Growth: The Role of Stock
Markets'. Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, 33: 16-41
6. Bernstein, P. L.
(1998) 'Stock Market Risk In A Post Keynesian World'.
Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 21: 15-24
8. Canterbery,
E. R. (1999) 'Irrational Exuberance and Rational Speculative Bubbles'.
International Trade Journal, 13 (1): 1-33
9. Chick, V. (1997)
'Some reflections on financial fragility in banking and finance'. Journal of
Economic Issues, 31 (2): 535-541
10. Clower, R. (1999) 'Post-Keynes Monetary and Financial
Theory'. Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 21 (3): 399-315
11. Dimand, R.W. (2003) 'Minsky and
Tobin on the Instability of a Monetary Economy' Paper presented at the 1st
Bi-Annual Canada/US Eastern Border Post-Keynesian Workshop: Central banking in
the modern world: Alternative perspectives, University of Ottawa
12. Dymski, G. (1997) 'Deciphering Minsky's
Wall Street Paradigm'. Journal of Economic Issues, 31, (2): 501-508
14. Evans, T. (2003) 'Marxian and post-Keynesian theories of finance and the business cycle'. Capital & Class, 83: 47-100
15.
15.
16. Glickman, M. (1994) 'The Concept of Information,
Intractable Uncertainty, and the
17. Kregel, J. (1998) 'Aspects of a Post Keynesian Theory of
Finance'. Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, Fall,
21(1): 111-33.
19. Niggle, C. (1988) 'The Increasing Importance of Financial
Capital in the U. S. Economy'. Journal of Economic Issues, 22 (2): 581-588
20. Niggle, C. (1995) 'The Role of the
Financial Sector in the Socialist Economies in Transition: The Second
"Primitive Accumulation of Capital"'. Review of Social Economy, 53
(3): 311-331
22. Pollin, R. (1996) 'Marxian and Post Keynesian Developments
in the Sphere of Money, Credit and Finance: Building Alternative Perspectives
in Monetary Macroeconomics'. Radical Political Economy, ed. V. Lippit: 205-225
23. Spotton, B. and Rowley, R. (1998) 'Efficient
markets, fundamentals, and crashes: American theories of financial crises and
market volatility'. American Journal of Economics & Sociology, 57 (4):
663-690
25. Studart, R. (1999) 'The efficiency of financial systems,
liberalization, and economic development'. Journal of Post Keynesian Economics,
18 (2): 269-292
27. Toporowski, J. (2000) 'The end of
finance: the theory of capital market inflation, financial derivatives, and
pension fund capitalism'.
29. Wolfson, M. (1990) 'The Causes of Financial Instability'.
Journal of Post Keynesian Economics, 12 (3): 333-55
2. Finance and credit in radical political
economy
***
1. Arrighi,
G. (1997) 'Financial Expansions in World Historical Perspective: A Reply to
Robert Pollin'. New Left Review 224: 154-160
2. Dymski,
G.A. (1990) 'Money and credit in radical political economy: A survey of
contemporary perspectives'. Review of Radical Political Economics 22 (2-3):
38-65
3. Gintis,
H. (1989) 'Financial markets and the political structure of the enterprise'.
Journal of economic behavior and organisation 11:
311-322
4. Guttmann, R. (1994)
'How Credit Money Shapes the Economy'. Armonk: Sharpe
5. Harris, L. (1976)
'On Interest, Credit and Capital'.
Economy and Society 5 (2): 145-77
7. Henwood
(1998) 'Wall Street: How It Works and for Whom'. Verso NEW!!!
8. Itoh,
M. and Lapavitsas, C. (1999) 'Political Economy of
Money and Finance'.
(PART I CLASSICAL FOUNDATIONS: 1. Classical Political Economy of Money and
Credit; 2. Value and Money in Marx's Political Economy; 3. Interest-Bearing
Capital: The Distinctive Marxist Approach. PART II PRINCIPLES OF CREDIT AND
FINANCE: 4. The Credit System; 5. Joint-Stock Capital
and the Capital Market; 6. Monetary and Financial Aspects of the Business
Cycle; 7. Central Banking. PART III POSTWAR REALITIES AND THEORIES: 8. Loss of
Control over Money and Finance; 9.The Rise and Fall of
Keynesianism; 10. Post-Keynesian Monetary Theory; 11.
Money and Credit in a Socialist Economy)
10. Magdoff, H. and Sweezy, P. (1985)
'The financial explosion. (American financial structure)'.
Monthly Review: An Independent Socialist Magazine 37: 1-9
11. Magdoff, H. and Sweezy, P. (1983)
'Production and Finance'. Monthly Review: An Independent Socialist Magazine 35:
1-12
12. Parson, J.E.
(1988) 'Bubble, Bubble, How Much Trouble?
Financial Markets, Capitalist Development and
Capitalist Crisis'. Science and Society 52 (3): 260-89
13. Sweezy, P.M. (1994) 'The Triumph of Financial Capital'.
Monthly Review: An Independent Socialist Magazine 46 (2): 1-10.
14. Toporowski, J. (2003) 'Sam Aaronovitch
and the Marxian understanding of finance'. Paper presented at Association For Heterodox Economics 5th Annual Conference,
see also
3. Financialization
***
1. Aglietta,
M. (2000) 'Shareholder value and corporate governance: some tricky questions'.
Economy and Society Vol 29 (1): 146-159
2. Aglietta,
M. and Breton, R. (2000) 'Financial systems, corporate control and capital
accumulation'. Economy and Society Vol 30 (4):
433-466
3. Boyer, R. (2000)
'Is a finance-led growth regime a viable alternative to Fordism?
A preliminary analysis'. Economy and Society 29(1):
111-45
5. Froud,
J., Haslam, C., Johal, S.
and Williams, K. (2000) 'Shareholder value and financialization:
consultancy promises, management moves'. Economy and Society 29 (1): 80-110
6. Krippner,
G.R. (2002) 'What Is Financialization?'. Paper Prepared for the Annual Meetings of the American
Sociological Association
7. Lazonick,
W. and O'Sullivan, M. (2000) 'Maximizing shareholder
value: a new ideology for corporate governance'. Economy and Society 29 (1):
13-35
10. Williams, K.
(2000) 'From Shareholder Value to Present-Day Capitalism'. Economy and Society
29 (1): 1-12
see also Financialization and the World Economy (forthcoming 2005). Edited by Gerald Epstein. Edward Elgar.