- Managerial theories of the firm (as developed by, e.g., Robin Marris)
- Markup pricing
- Sidney Chapman's theory of the length of the working day (as opposed to the textbook analysis of tradeoffs between leisure and commodities) (Derobert (2001), (Spencer 2003), and (Walker 2007)).
- Co-operatives (Kalmi 2007).
- Sidney and Beatrice Webb's analysis of labor markets (Kaufman 2008).
References
- L. Derobert. "On the Genesis of the Canonical Labor Supply Model". Journal of the History of Economic Thought, V. 23, N. 2 (2001): 197-215.
- Panu Kalmi. "The Disappearance of Cooperatives from Economics Textbooks". Cambridge Journal of Economics, V. 31 (2007): 625-647.
- Bruce Kaufman. "How a Minimum Wage Can Improve Efficiency Even in Competitive Labor Markets: The Webbs and the Social Cost of Labor". Andrew Young School of Policy Studies Research Paper Series, Working Paper 08-16 (July 2008).
- D. A. Spencer. "The Labor-Less Labor Supply Model in the Era Before Philip Wicksteed". Journal of the History of Economic Thought, V. 25, N. 4 (2003): 505-513.
- Tom Walker. "Why Economists Dislike a Lump of Labor". Review of Social Economy, V. 65, N. 3 (2007).
4 comments:
There is a quotation of Dennis Robertson, saying that if you stay in one place long enough, you will see the same theories disappearing, and appearing again.
Pablo
It's like ties or hem-lengths.
Today, while going through Georgescu-Roegen's 'Economics of Production', I noticed that he identifies working day (via Marx) as a significant variable while analysing production, even while using production functions.
A working paper version of Kalmi's essay is available at http://hsepubl.lib.hse.fi/pdf/wp/w398.pdf
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