As the United States continues its slow recovery from the global financial crisis of 2008, politicians, policymakers and academics are increasingly turning to the lessons of history to gain insight into how we might address both current and future economic challenges. This volume offers contributions by eminent economists and historians, each commenting on the theories of a particular 20th century economist and the ways in which those theories apply to modern economic thought.
As the United States continues its slow recovery from the global financial crisis of 2008, politicians, policymakers and academics are increasingly tu...
Robert M. Whaples Michael C. Munger Christopher J. Coyne
"Anyone concerned with social justice will find this book makes him question his assumptions, rethink his premises, and think!" -Andrew P. Morriss, professor, Bush School of Government and Public Service, School of Law, Texas A&M University What is social justice? In these pages, twenty-one accomplished academics seek to do justice to "social justice." Inequality exists and it obviously causes rifts in societies. But it's not obvious how the government should address those rifts, or if it should address them at all. Have we forgotten the perhaps more efficient power of personal...
"Anyone concerned with social justice will find this book makes him question his assumptions, rethink his premises, and think!" -Andrew P. Morriss, ...