Vol. 63 No. 4, April 1997
Index
- A License to Steal: The Forfeiture of Property.
- A Soaring Eagle: Alfred Marshall. 1842-1924.
- Accounting for race and gender differences in college wage premium changes.
- An empirical note on the impact of the federal budget deficit on ex ante real long-term interest rates, 1973-1995.
- Asian NIEs and the Global Economy: Industrial Restructuring and Corporate Strategy in the 1990s.
- Beyond Individualism: How Social Demands of the New Identity Groups Challenge American Political and Economic Life.
- Beyond Microfoundations: Post Walrasian Macroeconomics.
- Collected Works of Michal Kalecki, vol. 5, Developing Economies.
- Cost savings from nuclear regulatory reform: reply.
- Dynamic decisions in a laboratory setting.
- Economics and the Historian.
- Expectations and monetary neutrality: an empirical reexamination.
- Free trade and income redistribution in a three factor model of the U.S. economy.
- Getting it Right: Markets and Choices in a Free Society.
- Incentive Regulation for Public Utilities.
- Is the endogenous business cycle dead?
- Oil, Gas, and Government: The U.S. Experience, 2 vols.
- Physical and human capital accumulation, R&D and economic growth.
- Public goods production, nontraded goods and trade restrictions.
- Reinventing Marxism.
- Rogue Trader: I Brought Down Barings Bank and Shook the Financial World.
- Simple Rules of a Complex World.
- Technology adoption over the life cycle and aggregate technological progress.
- The Banking Panics of the Great Depression.
- The demand for nominal and real money balances in a large macroeconomic system.
- The determinants of dismissals, quits and layoffs: a multinomial logit approach.
- The Japanese Civil Service and Economic Development: Catalysts of Change.
- The Myth of Democratic Failure: Why Political Institutions are Efficient.
- The relationship between firm investments and technological innovation and political action.
- The relative efficiencies of market and planned economies.
- The Rise of Christianity: A Sociologist Reconsiders History.