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  1. JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC ISSUES Vol. XLIII No. 4 December 2009 DOI 10.2753/JEI0021-3624430404 The Other J.M.: John Maurice Clark and the Keynesian Revolution Luca Fiorito and Matías Vernengo Abstract: This paper suggests that Clark’s views regarding the Keynesian Revolution illuminate some of the limitations of the Keynesian orthodoxy that developed after the war, bringing more institutional ...

  2. 11. Juni 2018 · John Maurice Clark (1884–1963), thirty-seventh president of the American Economic Association, was born in Northampton, Massachusetts. After graduating from Amherst College with an a.b. degree in 1905, he pursued graduate studies in economics at Columbia University, where he received his m.a. in 1906 and his ph.d. in 1910.

  3. JOHN MAURICE. (1884-1963) Professeur à Columbia, John Maurice Clark est le fils de l'économiste américain John Bates Clark. Sa pensée peut se caractériser par quatre traits, constitutifs de l'école dite de l'institutionnalisme dont il est un des représentants. En premier lieu, contre l'économie marginaliste abstraite et déductive de ...

  4. JOHN MAURICE CLARK (1884-1963) Hijo del famoso economista John Bates Clark, nació en Northampton, Mas- sachussetts, en noviembre de 1884. Fue profesor de las universidades de Colorado, Amherst, Chicago y Columbia. Se reconoce por su artículo “Business Acceleration and the Law of Demand” (1917), publicado en el Journal of Political Economy.

  5. John Maurice, 1884–1963, amerik. Nationalökonom, Sohn von John Bates Clark, dessen Lehrstuhl an der Columbia University er 1926 übernahm.Mit seinem Aufsatz „Towards a Concept of Workable Competition“ (1940) löste er eine weltweite, bis heute nicht abgeschlossene Diskussion über Wettbewerbskonzepte aus.

  6. 1. Apr. 2017 · Mar 2017. Economic Responsibility. pp.25-45. John Maurice Clark is an early classic of the concept of “ordo” responsibility. He saw very clearly that the self-interest of the business sector ...

  7. Competition as a Dynamic Process. John Maurice Clark. Brookings Institution, 1961 - Competition - 501 pages. It examines the dynamic character of modern competition, appraises the inadequacies of equilibrium theory and suggests a new approach to the study and interpretation of competitive activities in the economy.