An important work, which situates Marx's economic thought in relation to the economic theories which predate him - from mercantilism to John Stuart Mill.
Contents:
Part One: Mercantilism and its Decline
Part Two: The Physiocrats
Part Three: Adam Smith
Part Four: David Ricardo
Part Five: The Decline of the Classical School
Part Six: Conclusion: A Brief Review of the Course
Attachments
rubin_economic_history.pdf
(18.19 MB)
rubin_economic_history.epub
(540.61 KB)
Comments
I noticed there's a lengthy
I noticed there's a lengthy afterword in this edition (published in 1979) by Colliot-Thelene that's supposedly a "daring essay which locates a crucial flaw in the logical structure of Marx's Capital." Haven't got there yet.
Thanks for bringing that to
Thanks for bringing that to my attention, zugzwang. I wonder what that flaw is.
Mark Blaug also has a more
Mark Blaug also has a more up-to-date "history of economics" with his Economic Theory in Retrospect, covering mercantilism all the way up to neoclassical and keynesian stuff (including marx in there). I think it's more theoretical and dwells less on the history/background side of things as Rubin does here, and I don't think Blaug was writing from a marxist perspective.
I'll have to read the afterword when I get there. I'm always skeptical though about people's motivations and their "refutations of marx" (not to say that marx is infallible and above criticism); the Mises Institute think-tank have hundreds of articles claiming to "refute marx" (followed by preaching how wonderful the freedom of workers to starve is) but it's no secret whose interests they're looking after. I think what Rubin says here is relevant:
Rubin