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  1. John Bates Clark (1847-1938) John Bates Clark (January 26, 1847 _ March 21, 1938) was an American neoclassical economist. He was one of the pioneers of the marginalist revolution and opponent to the Institutionalist school of economics, and spent most of his career as professor at Columbia University.

  2. John Bates Clark, the first United States economist to reach a position of prominence within this profession, was raised in an archetypal New England Puritan environment in Providence, Rhode Island.

  3. 5. Feb. 2018 · By John Bates Clark. This 1908 edition is the third reprinting of Clark’s path-breaking, yet widely under-read, 1899 textbook, in which he developed marginal productivity theory and used it to explore the way income is distributed between wages, interest, and rents in a market economy. In this book Clark made the theory of marginal ...

  4. JOHN BATES CLARK (Jan. 26, 1847-March 23, 1938) THE figure of John Bates Clark is one of unusual interest to the student of intellectual history. From the middle nineties of the last century to his retirement in the nineteen-twenties, Clark held the unchallenged premniership in American economic tlheory. His influence upon American economic ...

  5. John Bates Clark (26 Ocak 1847 - 21 Mart 1938), Amerikalı bir neoklasik iktisatçıdır. Marjinalist devrimin öncülerinden biriydi ve Kurumsalcı iktisat okuluna karşıydı ve kariyerinin çoğunu Columbia Üniversitesi 'nde profesör olarak geçirdi.

  6. John Bates Clark (26 de enero de 1847 – 21 de marzo de 1938) fue un economista neoclásico Estadounidense. Se le conoce por ser uno de los pioneros del Marginalismo y de oponerse a la Economía institucional. También, se lo conoce por la Medalla John Bates Clark, otorgada a todo estadounidense menor a cuarenta años que haya hecho una gran ...

  7. A Biographical Note on John Bates Clark, in "History of Economic Thought and Policy", 2/2016, pp. 132-140. Messori, L. e Orsini, R., John Bates Clark: the first American marginalist as a social economist , in "History of Economic Thought and Policy", 2/2018, pp. 33-53.