This book summarizes the debates and issues around the theory of capital and brings to the fore the more recent developments. It also pinpoints the similarities and differences between the various approaches and critically evaluates them in light of available empirical evidence. The focus of the book is on the price trajectories induced by changes in income distribution and the resulting shape of the wage rates of profit curves and frontier. These issues are central to areas such as microeconomics, international trade, growth, technological change and macro stability analysis. Each chapter starts with the theoretical issues involved, followed by their formalization and subsequently with their operationalization. More specifically, the variables of the classical theory of value and distribution are rigorously defined and quantified using actual input–output data from a number of major economies, but mainly from the USA, over long stretches of time. The empirical results are not only consistent with the anticipations of the theory but also further inform and therefore strengthen its predictive content raising new significant questions.
Lefteris Tsoulfidis holds a Ph.D. and an M.A. in economics from the New School for Social Research in New York, and a B.A. in economics from the University of Macedonia. He is currently a Professor in the Department of Economics at the University of Macedonia in Thessaloniki, where he teaches courses in the history of economic thought, economic history, political economy, mathematical economics and macroeconomics.
He is the author of Competing Schools of Economic Thought (2010) and co-author of Modern Classical Economics and Reality. A Spectral Analysis of the Theory of Value and Distribution (2016) and Classical Political Economics and Modern Capitalism: Theories of Value, Competition, Trade and Long Cycles (2019).