This book develops a unified treatment of the income distributioncapitalvalue problems with respect to actual economies, and then gradually turns to the issues of effective demand and capitalist accumulation fluctuations from both political economy and economic policy perspectives. That treatment, on the one hand, places produced means of production, positive profits, and capital accumulation at the centre of the analysis and, on the other hand, is analytically based on the modern control theory. Hence, the authors investigation is concerned with inputoutput representations of actual single and joint production, heterogeneous labour, and open economies; zeroes in on the characteristic value distributions of the system matrices; and, finally, derives meaningful theoretical results consistent with the empirical evidence, and vice versa. The main topics addressed are the uncontrollable/unobservable aspects of the real-world economies, the powerful low-order spectral approximations and reconstructions of the inter-industry structure of productionvaluedistributive variables relationships, the critical-constructive appraisal of both mainstream and radical theories of value, the matrix demand multipliers and demand-switching policies in heterogeneous capital worlds, and the circular inter-actions amongst income distribution, effective demand, accumulation, and technical conditions of production. Written on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the publication of both Piero Sraffas Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities and Rudolf E. Kalmans paper On the general theory of control systems, this book provides a consistent and comprehensive framework for theoretical, empirical, and economic policy research.
Chapter 1: Empirical InputOutput Representations and Transmutations of
Actual Economies.
Chapter 2: Controllability, Observability and Spectral
Post-Construction of the Value Theory.
Chapter 3: The Capital Theory Debate
and the Almost Uncontrollability and Unobservability of Actual Economies.-
Chapter 4: Value Theory, Joint Production and International Trade Issues.-
Chapter 5: Empirical Pitfalls of the Traditional Value Theory: Joint
Production and Actual Economies.
Chapter 6: Time Dilation, Abstract
Social-International Labour and Profit.
Chapter 7: Arguing in Circles:
Alternative Value Bases and Actual Economies.
Chapter 8: Capital Theory and
Matrix Demand Multipliers in Sraffian Frameworks.
Chapter 9: Effective
Demand and Devaluation Policies: Evidence from InputOutput Tables for
Eurozone Economies.
Chapter 10: Wrestling with Goodwins Distributive Growth
Cycle Modelling: Theory and Empirical Evidence.
Chapter 11: Marxian
DistributiveEffective Demand Dynamics and the Law of Rising Profit Rate.
Theodore Mariolis is Professor of Political Economy in the Department of Public Administration at the Panteion University of Athens, Greece. His main educational and research interests are Political Economy, InputOutput Analysis, International Economics, Theory of Endogenous Economic Fluctuations, and History of Economic Thought. He was Founder & Co-Editor of the journal Bulletin of Political Economy, and is Director of the Study Group on Sraffian Economics. Nikolaos Rodousakis is a Research Fellow in the Centre of Planning and Economic Research (KEPE), Athens, Greece. He holds a Degree in Public Economics, a M.A. in Economics of Production and Intersectoral Relations, and a PhD in Economics from the Department of Public Administration of the Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences, Greece. His main educational and research interests are Political Economy, InputOutput Analysis, and Theory of Endogenous Economic Fluctuations. George Soklis is a Research Fellow in the Centre of Planning and Economic Research (KEPE), Athens, Greece. He holds a Degree in Public Economics, a M.A. in Economics of Production and Intersectoral Relations, and a PhD in Economics from the Department of Public Administration of the Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences, Greece. His main educational and research interests are Political Economy, InputOutput Analysis, and Tourism Economics.