I: The One-Product Model; I: Six Assumptions; II: Money, Prices, and Interest in the One-Product Model; III: Of Propdems, Plantcaps, and other States of Society; IV: The One-Product Model of Capitalistic Production; V: Changes in Standards of Living in Propdems and Plantcaps; VI: The State of Steady Growth: (1) Two Factors and No Technical Progress; VII: The State of Steady Growth: (2) A Third Factor and Technical Progress; VIII: The Level of Consumption in a State of Steady Growth; IX: The Determinants of Technical Progress; X: Demographic Adjustment; XI: Population Growth and the Standard of Living; XII: Savings: (1) Perfect Selfishness; XIII: Savings: (2) Perfect Altruism; XIV: From Propdem and Plantcap to Procap; II: The Many-Product Model; XV: Capitalistic Production with Many Products; XVI: Money, Prices, and Interest in a Many-Product Economy; XVII: The Stationary State; XVIII: Equilibrium Growth in a Competitive Economy; XIX: Planned Growth in a Socialist Economy; XX: A Four-Product Model; XXI: Risk, Uncertainty, and Enterprise; XXII: Three Methods of Reducing Risk and Uncertainty; XXIII: Efficiency and Distribution Revisited—Conclusion