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See also:

Maurice Allais (I); Antiquity (II); Walter Bagehot (I); Balance of payments and exchange rates (III); Banking and currency schools (II); British classical political economy (II); Bullionist and anti-bullionist schools (II); Business cycles and growth (III); Cambridge School of Economics (II); Richard Cantillon (I); Chicago School

(II) ; Economic thought in Scholasticism (II); Francis Ysidro Edgeworth (I); Financial economics (III); Irving Fisher (I); Milton Friedman (I); General equilibrium theory (III); Ralph George Hawtrey (I); Friedrich August von Hayek (I); John Richard Hicks (I); David Hume (I); Institutional economics (III); Institutionalism (II); International trade (III); Edwin Walter Kemmerer (I); John Maynard Keynes (I); Keynesianism (II); Oskar Ryszard Lange (I); John Law (I); Macroeconomics (III); Thomas Robert Malthus (I); Alfred Marshall (I); Karl Heinrich Marx (I); Marxism(s) (II); Mercantilism and the science of trade (II); John Stuart Mill (I); Monetarism (II); Robert Alexander Mundell (I); New Keynesianism (II); Open economy macroeconomics

(III) ; Don Patinkin (I); Post-Keynesianism (II); David Ricardo (I); Paul Anthony Samuelson (I); Adam Smith (I); James Steuart [James Denham-Steuart] (I); Joseph Eugene Stiglitz (I); Stockholm (Swedish) School (II); Theory of the firm (III); Henry Thornton (I); James Tobin (I); Thomas Tooke (I); Robert Torrens (I); Value and price (III); Knut Wicksell (I).

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Source: Faccarello G., Kurz H.-D.. Handbook on the history of economic analysis. Volume III, Developments in major fields of economics. Edward Elgar,2016. — 659 p. 2016

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