Publicado por University Press of America, Incorporated, 1983
ISBN 10: 0819136654 ISBN 13: 9780819136657
Idioma: Inglés
Librería: Better World Books, Mishawaka, IN, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 16,93
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Añadir al carritoCondición: Good. Former library book; may include library markings. Used book that is in clean, average condition without any missing pages.
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Usado desde EUR 34,22
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Librería: California Books, Miami, FL, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 40,03
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Añadir al carritoCondición: New.
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Nuevo desde EUR 46,94
Usado desde EUR 57,51
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Publicado por Literary Licensing, LLC, 2013
ISBN 10: 149411206X ISBN 13: 9781494112066
Idioma: Inglés
Librería: California Books, Miami, FL, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 42,70
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Añadir al carritoCondición: New.
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Nuevo desde EUR 47,98
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Publicado por Arlington House, New Rochelle, NY, 1973
Idioma: Inglés
Librería: Olana Gallery, Brewster, NY, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 37,18
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Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Good. Good hardcover copy with no d/j, xii + 458 pp.
Librería: BargainBookStores, Grand Rapids, MI, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 53,11
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Añadir al carritoCondición: New. The Failure of the New Economics: An Analysis of the Keynesian Fallacies (Hardback or Cased Book) 1.75.
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Nuevo desde EUR 63,91
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Librería: GreatBookPrices, Columbia, MD, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 54,79
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Nuevo desde EUR 72,05
Usado desde EUR 72,22
Encuentre también Tapa dura
Publicado por University Press of America, Lanham, MD, 1983
ISBN 10: 0819136646 ISBN 13: 9780819136640
Idioma: Inglés
Librería: 2Vbooks, Derwood, MD, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 58,58
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Añadir al carritoHard cover. 470 p. previous owner's name area blackened with black marker Clean, tight inside pages. No bent corners. closed pages have shelf wear dust PAGES 75 TO 426 DO NOT HAVE ANY HIGHLIGHTING EB 82 Good. No dust jacket. Highlighting/underlining.
Librería: Lucky's Textbooks, Dallas, TX, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 54,20
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Publicado por Arlington House, 1973
Librería: Tacoma Book Center, Tacoma, WA, Estados Unidos de America
EUR 77,39
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Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Very Good. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Dustjacket included. Later Edition. ISBN 087000226x. Hardback. Original 1973 edition from Arlington House. Very Small previous owners name on the first page in, otherwise book is a Tight sound unmarked copy in Very Good to Near Fine condition. Tight bright attractive copy with no markings to the book otherwise. Dustjacket is in Near Fine condition, with no creasing and no chipping, $ 9.95 original price is present and unclipped on front dustjacket flap. The dustjacket has been placed in a Brodart protective cover by us to protect it and it looks much better than described. . This does not affect the dustjacket in any way, as all taping is done on the outside of the protector. This book is The Failure of the "New Economics" An Analysis of The Keynesian Fallacies. Original 1973 Arlington House Edition. No Signature.
Publicado por Arlington House, 1973
Librería: Amusespot, Henderson, NV, Estados Unidos de America
Ejemplar firmado
EUR 351,37
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Añadir al carritoHardcover. Condición: Very Good. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Good. Tear to top of DJ. Else VG-VG+. In protective wraps. Inscribed by Author.
Publicado por Arlington House, New Rochelle, New York, 1973
Librería: The BiblioFile, Rapid River, MI, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 351,37
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Añadir al carritoHard Cover. Condición: Fine. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Very Good. Terracciano, Marge (Wrapper Design) Ilustrador. First Edition Thus. Stated at copyright page: "Copyright 1959 by D. Van Nostrand., transferred 1973 to Henry Hazlitt. Printed in the United States of America. Essentially, a reprint under Hazlitt's ownership from Arlington House with new wrapper design and summary and redesign of volume. A heavy volume of substance. Black coated full cloth boards (buckram), blind-stamped publisher's emblem at cover, bronze metaillic spine titles, light shelf wear. Pages fine; no writing. Bind fine, square; hinges intact. Pictorial wrapper, light edge wear, rub, discoloration; unclipped 11.95, protected in new clear sleeve. Jacket design by Marge Terracciano. Back panel with "Raves for Henry Hazlitt's 'Great Book'. Near fine first Arlington issue in near very good wrapper. A lively, penetrating criticim of Lord Keyne's celebrated work "The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money." In this book, Hazlitt writes a critical chapter-by-chapter and theorem-by-theorem analysis of Keyne's 'New Economics' first posited in 1936. Hazlitt contends that these economic theories fail as a tool of analysis and as a basis for forecasting or as public policy. Insightful, digestible, yet comprehensive material. "Hazlitt, with cold logic and economic skill, destroys the whole Keynesian theory." - Raymond Moley. "He has entirely demolished the Keynesian misconceptions." - Ludwig Von Mises. Henry Hazlitt did the seemingly impossible, something that was and is a magnificent service to all people everywhere. He wrote a line-by-line commentary and refutation of one of the most destructive, fallacious, and convoluted books of the century. The target is John Maynard Keynes's General Theory, the book that appeared in 1936 and swept all before it. In economic science, Keynes changed everything. He supposedly demonstrated that prices don't work, that private investment is unstable, that sound money is intolerable, and that government was needed to shore up the system and save it. It was simply astonishing how economists the world over put up with this, but it happened. He was used to convert a whole generation in the late period of the Great Depression. By the 1950s, almost everyone was Keynesian. But Hazlitt, the nation's economics teacher, would have none of it. And he did the hard work of actually going through the book to evaluate its logic according to Austrian-style logical reasoning. The result: this five hundred-page masterpiece of exposition on modern monetary theory. Murray Rothbard was blown away. Hazlitt was a libertarian philosopher, economist, and journalist for various publications including the Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, and Newsweek. He was the founding vice-president of the Foundation for Economic Education and an early editor of The Freeman, an important libertarian magazine. In 1946 Hazlitt wrote "Economics in One Lesson," his seminal text on free market economics, which Ayn Rand called a "magnificent job of theoretical exposition." Hazlitt is credited with bringing his ideas and those of the so-called Austrian School to American economics; his work has influenced, among many, three-time presidential candidate Ron Paul. Includes eight-page detailed index. Printed in the United States of America. 458 pages. Insured post. Size: 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" Tall.
Publicado por D. Van Nostrand Company, Inc., Princeton, New Jersey - Toronto, London, Melbourne, 1967
Librería: The BiblioFile, Rapid River, MI, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 400,30
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Añadir al carritoHard Cover. Condición: Good. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Good. First Edition. First edition, sixth printing matching first printing in design, materials, colors. First Published April 1959; this printing, March 1967. A heavy volume of substance. Manila beige boards, reddish brown cloth spine wrap, white spine titles, moderate shelf wear, little residue at boards. Pages very good, clean. Bind fine, square; hinges intact. Original wrapper in mustard yellow with black band and whites, moderate shelf wear, rub; price-clipped, protected in new clear sleeve. Front flap features summary of this title and back panel a brief bio of Hazlitt; back panel features rave review blurbs for this title. Clean, near very good early printing of the original edition in same wrapper. Stamp at title page and initials to exterior block, card pocket at back, and wrapper label, for: "Sauk Valley College Library." Interestingly, Sauk Valley College is in Dixon, Illinois was the boyhood home of President Ronald Reagan. Dixon is also the site of the Lincoln Monument State Memorial, marking the spot where Abraham Lincoln joined the Illinois militia at Fort Dixon in 1832 during the Black Hawk War. A lively, penetrating criticim of Lord Keyne's celebrated work "The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money." In this book, Hazlitt writes a critical chapter-by-chapter and theorem-by-theorem analysis of Keyne's 'New Economics' first posited in 1936. Hazlitt contends that these economic theories fail as a tool of analysis and as a basis for forecasting or as public policy. Insightful, digestible, yet comprehensive material. "Hazlitt, with cold logic and economic skill, destroys the whole Keynesian theory." - Raymond Moley. "He has entirely demolished the Keynesian misconceptions." - Ludwig Von Mises. Henry Hazlitt did the seemingly impossible, something that was and is a magnificent service to all people everywhere. He wrote a line-by-line commentary and refutation of one of the most destructive, fallacious, and convoluted books of the century. The target is John Maynard Keynes's General Theory, the book that appeared in 1936 and swept all before it. In economic science, Keynes changed everything. He supposedly demonstrated that prices don't work, that private investment is unstable, that sound money is intolerable, and that government was needed to shore up the system and save it. It was simply astonishing how economists the world over put up with this, but it happened. He was used to convert a whole generation in the late period of the Great Depression. By the 1950s, almost everyone was Keynesian. But Hazlitt, the nation's economics teacher, would have none of it. And he did the hard work of actually going through the book to evaluate its logic according to Austrian-style logical reasoning. The result: this five hundred-page masterpiece of exposition on modern monetary theory. Murray Rothbard was blown away. Hazlitt was a libertarian philosopher, economist, and journalist for various publications including the Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, and Newsweek. He was the founding vice-president of the Foundation for Economic Education and an early editor of The Freeman, an important libertarian magazine. In 1946 Hazlitt wrote "Economics in One Lesson," his seminal text on free market economics, which Ayn Rand called a "magnificent job of theoretical exposition." Hazlitt is credited with bringing his ideas and those of the so-called Austrian School to American economics; his work has influenced, among many, three-time presidential candidate Ron Paul. Includes eight-page detailed index. Printed in the United States of America. 458 pages. Insured post. Size: 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" Tall.
Publicado por D. Van Nostrand Company, Inc., Princeton, New Jersey - Toronto, London, Melbourne, 1968
Librería: The BiblioFile, Rapid River, MI, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 400,30
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Añadir al carritoHard Cover. Condición: Good. First Edition. First edition, seventh printing. First Published April 1959; this printing, December 1968. A heavy volume of substance. Brown buckram (cloth) boards, white cover and spine titles, moderate shelf wear, bump. Pages generally very good, clean; no writing in text body. Small number and area of toning at title page, front blank endpaper removed, marked out area to top and bottom exterior text block. Bind fine, square. Near very good rarity of honest economics. A lively, penetrating criticim of Lord Keyne's celebrated work "The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money." In this book, Hazlitt writes a critical chapter-by-chapter and theorem-by-theorem analysis of Keyne's 'New Economics' of 1936. Hazlitt contends that these economic theories failed as a tool of analysis and as a basis for forecasting or as public policy. Insightful, digestible, yet comprehensive material. "Hazlitt, with cold logic and economic skill, destroys the whole Keynesian theory." - Raymond Moley. "He has entirely demolished the Keynesian misconceptions." - Ludwig Von Mises. Includes eight-page detailed index. Printed in the United States of America. 458 pages. Insured post. Size: 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" Tall.
Publicado por D. Van Nostrand Company, Inc., Princeton, New Jersey - Toronto, London, Melbourne, 1960
Librería: The BiblioFile, Rapid River, MI, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 845,08
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Añadir al carritoHard Cover. Condición: Fine. Estado de la sobrecubierta: Very Good. First Edition. First edition, third printing matching first printing in design, materials, colors. First Published April 1959; this printing, March 1960. A heavy volume of substance. Beige boards, ruddy brown cloth spine wrap, white spine titles, light shelf wear. Pages near fine, clean. Unsigned bookplate at front pastedown. Bind fine, square. Original wrapper in mustard yellow with black band and whites, moderate shelf wear, rub; unclipped 7.50, protected in new clear sleeve. Front flap features summary of this title and back panel a brief bio of Hazlitt. Back panel features other Significant Van Nostrand Books on Economics with summaries from: Ludwig von Mises: Mary Sennholz' "On Freedom and Free Enterprise"; John Chamberlain; and, Hazlitt. Near fine rarity of honest economics in very good original wrapper. A lively, penetrating criticim of Lord Keyne's celebrated work "The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money." In this book, Hazlitt writes a critical chapter-by-chapter and theorem-by-theorem analysis of Keyne's 'New Economics' first posited in 1936. Hazlitt contends that these economic theories fail as a tool of analysis and as a basis for forecasting or as public policy. Insightful, digestible, yet comprehensive material. "Hazlitt, with cold logic and economic skill, destroys the whole Keynesian theory." - Raymond Moley. "He has entirely demolished the Keynesian misconceptions." - Ludwig Von Mises. Henry Hazlitt did the seemingly impossible, something that was and is a magnificent service to all people everywhere. He wrote a line-by-line commentary and refutation of one of the most destructive, fallacious, and convoluted books of the century. The target is John Maynard Keynes's General Theory, the book that appeared in 1936 and swept all before it. In economic science, Keynes changed everything. He supposedly demonstrated that prices don't work, that private investment is unstable, that sound money is intolerable, and that government was needed to shore up the system and save it. It was simply astonishing how economists the world over put up with this, but it happened. He was used to convert a whole generation in the late period of the Great Depression. By the 1950s, almost everyone was Keynesian. But Hazlitt, the nation's economics teacher, would have none of it. And he did the hard work of actually going through the book to evaluate its logic according to Austrian-style logical reasoning. The result: this five hundred-page masterpiece of exposition on modern monetary theory. Murray Rothbard was blown away. Hazlitt was a libertarian philosopher, economist, and journalist for various publications including the Wall Street Journal and The New York Times, and Newsweek. He was the founding vice-president of the Foundation for Economic Education and an early editor of The Freeman, an important libertarian magazine. In 1946 Hazlitt wrote "Economics in One Lesson," his seminal text on free market economics, which Ayn Rand called a "magnificent job of theoretical exposition." Hazlitt is credited with bringing his ideas and those of the so-called Austrian School to American economics; his work has influenced, among many, three-time presidential candidate Ron Paul. Includes eight-page detailed index. Printed in the United States of America. 458 pages. Insured post. Size: 8vo - over 7¾ - 9¾" Tall.
Publicado por Princeton: D. Van Nostrand Company, Inc., 1959, 1959
Librería: Peter Harrington. ABA/ ILAB., London, Reino Unido
Original o primera edición Ejemplar firmado
EUR 7.985,31
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Añadir al carritoFirst edition, first printing, inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper, "To George Selgin with warmest regards Henry Hazlitt. Aug. 31, 1983". The recipient (b. 1957) is a leading American free-market economist, particularly vocal in promoting denationalized money; he cites Hazlitt as the figure who introduced him to the school. He is currently Senior Fellow and Director Emeritus of the Cato Institute's Centre for Monetary and Financial Alternatives. The Failure of the "New Economics" gives an in-depth criticism of Keynes's General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money. "In this thoroughgoing but lively new book, Henry Hazlitt subjects Keynes's celebrated work to chapter-by-chapter and theorem-by-theorem. He challenges every leading Keynesian tenet: the attempted refutation of Say's Law; the fear of thrift and saving; the alleged dependence of employment on 'the propensity to consume'; the disparagement of the gold standard; the 'liquidity preference' explanation of interest rates; the attack on 'speculation'; and above all the contention that unemployment is not caused by wage-rates taht are excessive in relation to prices or production" (jacket). Octavo. Original brown cloth, spine lettered in white, front cover lettered in brown. With dust jacket. A little rubbed and bumped at extremities, contents clean; jacket with large chip at foot of spine (not affecting lettering), a little rubbed with smaller chips elsewhere, price-clipped: a very good copy in good jacket.
Publicado por D. Van Van Nostrand Company, Inc, Princeton, NJ, 1959
Librería: Burnside Rare Books, ABAA, Portland, OR, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
EUR 2.668,67
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Añadir al carritoFirst edition. First edition, first printing. xii, 458 pp. Bound in publisher's pale orange cloth with brown cloth backstrip, lettered in brown and white. Very Good+ with some foxing to cloth along fore edge,slight concavity to spine, in Very Good dust jacket, slightly bumped corners, head and tail worn, scuff to spine panel, small closed tear to front panel, unclipped ($7.50). Scarce.The correct first printing of financial journalist and author Henry Hazlitt's thorough refutation of Keynes's General Theory. The libertarian institution Mises Institute writes of the book, "Henry Hazlitt did the seemingly impossible, something that was and is a magnificent service to all people everywhere. He wrote a line-by-line commentary and refutation of one of the most destructive, fallacious, and convoluted books of the century. [.] In economic science, Keynes changed everything. [.] But Hazlitt, the nation's economics teacher, would have none of it. And he did the hard work of actually going through the book to evaluate its logic according to Austrian-style logical reasoning. The result: a 500-page masterpiece of exposition.".