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8 - The structure of the mature comprehensive model

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 May 2010

Donald A. Walker
Affiliation:
Indiana University of Pennsylvania
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Summary

This chapter begins the examination of the comprehensive model that Léon Walras constructed during the mature period of his theoretical work. This model constitutes the culmination of his work on capital and on what he regarded as the essentials of general economic equilibration and equilibrium. The chapter answers fundamental questions about Walras's definitions, his assumptions about the nature of capital goods in the model, and his treatment of productive services, consumer commodities, participants, market institutions, money, and the types of economic activities with which the markets in the model are concerned.

Introduction

This chapter continues the study of the mature phase of Walras's theoretical work, which spanned the years 1878 to the mid-1890s. Chapters 6 and 7 dealt with his mature model of the production and sale of productive services, primary materials, nondurable consumption goods, and consumable services in an economy in which there is no saving and in which capital goods are not subject to wear and tear or accidents. Walras did not use that model in his mature comprehensive model, but he employed some of its features in developing the latter. By the “mature comprehensive model” is meant his allinclusive mature model of general equilibration and equilibrium, which he introduced and largely completed in the lessons in the Eléments he titled “Theory of Capital Formation and of Credit.” The model includes all the basic components of his theoretical system.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1996

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