30170 - HISTORY OF ECONOMIC THOUGHT
CLEAM - CLEF - CLEACC - BESS-CLES - BIEMF
Department of Economics
Course taught in English
Go to class group/s: 31
CLEAM (6 credits - I sem. - OP | SECS-P/04) - CLEF (6 credits - I sem. - OP | SECS-P/04) - CLEACC (6 credits - I sem. - OP | SECS-P/04) - BESS-CLES (6 credits - I sem. - OP | SECS-P/04) - BIEMF (6 credits - I sem. - OP | SECS-P/04)
Course Director:
IVAN MOSCATI
IVAN MOSCATI
Course Objectives
After completing this course, students should be able to:
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Identify the major ideas associated with each school or author studied, and thereby comprehend the origins of contemporary theory
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Evaluate similarities and differences across schools/paradigms/theoretical frameworks, and understand how methodological issues have often shaped the development of economic ideas
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Trace how the scope of what is considered an economic question, and the methods of those who explore economic questions, have evolved
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Use difference across schools/paradigms/theoretical frameworks to think critically about the underlying assumptions and focus of economics learned in other courses
Course Content Summary
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The economic theory of Adam Smith
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The classical school (1790-1870): from Ricardo to J.S. Mill, through Marx
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The marginal revolution (1870-1890): Menger, Jevons, Walras
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The consolidation of neoclassical economics (1890-1930): Wieser and Böhm-Bawerk in Austria; Edgeworth, Wicksteed, and Marshall in England
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Demand analysis between 1900 and 1939: Pareto, the ordinal revolution and behaviorism
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Theories of money and business cycle until the 1930s; Keynes’s General Theory (1936)
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Between 1940 and 1960: the neoclassical synthesis in macroeconomics; the axiomatization of choice theory; the birth of game theory
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Alternative approaches: Simon, Sen and the critique of the neoclassical theory of choice; Sraffa and the critique of the neoclassical theory of capital
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From 1970 to the later 20th century: Monetarism, New Classical Macroeconomics, and Real Business Cycle theory in macroeconomics; the rise of experimental and behavioral economics in microeconomics
Detailed Description of Assessment Methods
Written exam.
Textbooks
- Lectures notes (available on Learning Space)
- Original texts
- Suggested but not compulsory textbook:
- M. BLAUG, Economic Theory in Retrospect, Cambridge University Press, Fifth edition.
Prerequisites
Familiarity with basic micro- and macroeconomic theory
Last change 29/04/2011 11:37