Scheda programma d'esame
CLASSICAL AND POST-KEYNESIAN ECONOMICS
NERI SALVADORI
Academic year2020/21
CourseECONOMICS
Code609PP
Credits6
PeriodSemester 1
LanguageItalian

ModulesAreaTypeHoursTeacher(s)
CLASSICAL AND POST-KEYNESIAN ECONOMICSSECS-P/01LEZIONI42
NERI SALVADORI unimap
Programma non disponibile nella lingua selezionata
Learning outcomes
Knowledge

The course provides the basic elements of Value, Capital, Growth and Accumulation within Classical and Post-Keynesian Economics.

Assessment criteria of knowledge

The course will be held partially on a seminar basis. Students will be evaluated also on the basis of their presentation to seminars, but the issues dealt with on a seminar basis will not be compulsory even if the students who have not delivered a talk in a seminar have to choose a number of issues for the exam. 

Prerequisites

Students must be familiar with the standard tools of microeconomics, elementary algebra, and elementary mathematical analysis. Some knowledge of models of economic growth is recommended, but is not required.

Teaching methods

The course will be held partially on a seminar basis. Students will be evaluated also on the basis of their presentation to seminars, but the issues dealt with on a seminar basis will not be compulsory even if the students who have not delivered a talk in a seminar have to choose a number of issues for the exam. 

Syllabus

Ricardo Theory of Growth and Accumulation: The one-sector model; The two-sector model; The small open economy; The Wold Economy.

Theory of Production: Production with capital and labour without land; Capital theory and criticism of Neo-Classical theory of distribution.

Post-Keynesian Theory of Growth and Distribution: Origin; Dual and Neo-Pasinetti Theorems; Existence of a Two-class economy; Public Sector and International Trade.

Bibliography

Neri Salvadori, Ricardo’s theory of growth and accumulation. A modern view, London: Routledge, 2020.

Kurz, H.D. & Salvadori, N. (2001) Production Theory: An Introduction”, Indian Economic Journal, 2001. Reprinted in Kurz, H.D. & Salvadori, N. (2003). Classical Economics and Modern Theory: Studies in Long-period Analysis, London and New York: Routledge; pp. 238-255.

Kurz, D. H. and N. Salvadori, Theory of production, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995; Chapters 2, 3, and 14.

Panico C. & Salvadori, N. (a cura di) (1993), Post Keynesian Theory of Growth and Distribution, Aldershot (U.K.): Edward Elgar. 

Commendatore P., S D'Acunto, C Panico (2003), Keynesian Theories Of Growth, in N. Salvadori (a cura di) The Theory of Economic Growth: A ‘Classical’ Perspective. Cheltenham (U.K.): Edward Elgar; pp. 103-160.

 

Assessment methods

The students who have delivered a seminar within the course will be evaluated on the basis of their performance plus a short exam on the part of the course which is tought though traditional lectures by the professor. The students who have NOT delivered a seminar within the course will be evaluated on the basis of a longer exam with the addition of two further issues to be chosen by the students from an issue topic pool.

Updated: 13/09/2020 07:13