Principles of Economics
by Carl Menger
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Description
Carl Menger is considered the father of the Austrian School of Economics. His pioneering work, "Principles of Economics," published in 1871, not only introduced the concept of marginal analysis but also presented a radically new approach to economic analysis, which remains the core of Austrian theory of value and prices. For the beginner, "Principles of Economics" remains an excellent introduction to economic reasoning, and for the expert, it is the classic demonstration of the fundamental show more principles of the Austrian School. Despite its solid economic content, this work is extremely comprehensible even for readers not specialized in economics. This is due to the author's crystal-clear reasoning, always accompanied by numerous and didactic examples. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
This flawed work of economic theory is the best work I've ever read on the subject. Over 130 years since publication, it remains the best introduction to the science. The author carefully builds the foundations for subjectivist and marginalist theory about value, utility, and exchange, delineates a theory of the FORMATION (not DETERMINATION) of prices, and offers an account for the evolution of money. The book's main problem, for modern readers, is that he does not use the terminology that has become standard in the discipline. But that's a small complaint. Besides, if one reads and understands Menger's account, the struggle with the discipline's terminology and leading concepts is a necessary education in and of itself, and might as show more well be done by each student, not pre-digested. It's a good exercise, then, to read the book and then begin the translation and critique of the economics that came later.
Menger's book became the start of a distinct school of economics, the so-called Austrian School. The Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises claimed that this book began his real education, made him "think like an economist." And that was already after Mises had written a respected book in the field!
Menger's book is still important to the school, while the works of Jevons, Walras, and Marshall have been largely superceded. Interesting disjunction, no? show less
Menger's book became the start of a distinct school of economics, the so-called Austrian School. The Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises claimed that this book began his real education, made him "think like an economist." And that was already after Mises had written a respected book in the field!
Menger's book is still important to the school, while the works of Jevons, Walras, and Marshall have been largely superceded. Interesting disjunction, no? show less
One of the great books of economics.
Contains the first references to the Subjective Theory of Value in Economics
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Economics
60 works; 5 members
Economics for the layperson
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Author Information
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title*
- Principi di economia politica
- Original title
- Grundsätze Der Volkswirthschaftslehre; Grundsatze der Volkswirtschaftslehre
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- Members
- 225
- Popularity
- 144,730
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (4.56)
- Languages
- English, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 22
- ASINs
- 4






























































