Results 11 to 20 of about 4,112,346 (110)

Valuing the Surplus: Perspectives on Julian Horton's Article ‘On the Musicological Necessity of Music Analysis’, Musical Quarterly, 3/i–ii, pp. 62–104.Contributors: Kofi Agawu, Gurminder K. Bhogal, Esther Cavett, Jonathan Dunsby, Julian Horton, Alexandra Monchick, Ian Pace, Henry Stobart and Simon Zagorski‐Thomas, compiled and edited by Esther Cavett

open access: yesMusic Analysis, Volume 42, Issue 3, Page 412-471, October 2023., 2023
ABSTRACT Julian Horton's 2020 article on the ‘necessity of analysis’ delineates previous critiques of music analysis into the performative and the historicist and counters their assumptions. He proposes that analysis remains viable in light of historical, ontological, systemic, discursive, phenomenological and political imperatives.
Kofi Agawu   +8 more
wiley   +1 more source

Do macroeconomic indicators determine income inequality in selected African countries?

open access: yesJournal of Public Affairs, Volume 22, Issue 4, November 2022., 2022
This study investigates the effect of macroeconomic variables on income distribution in Africa using panel data from 2001 to 2016. This is motivated by the high degree of income inequality and poverty in the region. Twenty‐eight (28) African countries were selected to capture every region.
Fredrick O. Asogwa   +4 more
wiley   +1 more source

When Walras meets Vickrey

open access: yesTheoretical Economics, Volume 17, Issue 4, Page 1803-1845, November 2022., 2022
We consider general asset market environments in which agents with quasilinear payoffs are endowed with objects and have demands for other agents' objects. We show that if all agents have a maximum demand of one object and are endowed with at most one object, the VCG transfer of each agent is equal to the largest net Walrasian price of this agent ...
David Delacrétaz   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

Walras, Musgrave et l’hétérogénéité entre les biens publics et les biens privés

open access: yesŒconomia, 2021
Léon Walras (1834-1910) and Richard A. Musgrave (1910-2007) both argued that the state was providing public goods that were not directly demanded by individuals.
Maxime Desmarais-Tremblay
doaj   +1 more source

Why was Keynes not awarded the Nobel Peace Prize after writing The Economic Consequences of the Peace?*

open access: yesThe Scandinavian Journal of Economics, Volume 124, Issue 2, Page 396-419, April 2022., 2022
Abstract John Maynard Keynes became famous with The Economic Consequences of the Peace published in 1919, a harsh critique of the Versailles peace treaty. As a consequence, Keynes was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 1922, 1923, and 1924, and evaluated in advisory reports for the Nobel Committee of the Norwegian parliament.
Lars Jonung
wiley   +1 more source

Léon Walras and Augustin Cournot on the Regulation of Paper Money: Rules vs. Discretion at the End of the 19th Century

open access: yesIberian Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 2020
This paper compares Léon Walras’ and Augustin Cournot’s views on monetary regulation. It shows that whereas Cournot believed discretionary monetary regulation to be convenient and acceptable, Walras held that the only acceptable monetary system is based ...
Andrés Álvarez
doaj   +1 more source

Top graduate programmes in economics: Historical evolution and recent evidence

open access: yesKyklos, Volume 74, Issue 3, Page 378-395, August 2021., 2021
Abstract The first part of the paper provides a novel overview narrative of the historical evolution of PhD programmes in economics from 1880, drawing on multiple sources. The second part is empirical, and, also novel in terms of the data constructed. It attempts to bring the narrative up to date by looking at the cohorts of winners of the main young ...
John O’Hagan
wiley   +1 more source

Walrasian equilibria from an optimization perspective: A guide to the literature

open access: yesNaval Research Logistics (NRL), Volume 68, Issue 4, Page 496-513, June 2021., 2021
Abstract An ideal market mechanism allocates resources efficiently such that welfare is maximized and sets prices in a way so that the outcome is in a competitive equilibrium and no participant wants to deviate. An important part of the literature discusses Walrasian equilibria and conditions for their existence.
Martin Bichler   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

The Capitalist Cage: Structural Domination and Collective Agency in the Market

open access: yesJournal of Applied Philosophy, Volume 38, Issue 1, Page 40-54, February 2021., 2021
Abstract This article develops and defends a triadic account of structural domination, according to which structural domination (e.g. patriarchy, white supremacy, capitalism) is a triadic relation between dominator(s), dominated, and regulator(s)—the constitutive domination dyad plus those roles and norms expressively upholding it.
Nicholas Vrousalis
wiley   +1 more source

Léon Walras, Irving Fisher and the Cowles Approach to General Equilibrium Analysis

open access: yesŒconomia, 2021
This paper explores the relationship of Walras’s work to a particularly influential tradition of general equilibrium, that associated with the Cowles Commission for Research in Economics in Colorado in the 1930s and at the University of Chicago from 1939
Robert W. Dimand
doaj   +1 more source

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