John Wiley & Sons Celebrating Irving Fisher Cover Irving Fisher (1867-1947), economist, Yale University teacher, inventor, mathematician and activist .. Product #: 978-1-4051-3307-4 Regular price: $44.77 $44.77 In Stock

Celebrating Irving Fisher

The Legacy of a Great Economist

Dimand, Roger W. / Geanakoplos, John (Editor)

Economics and Sociology Thematic Issue

Cover

1. Edition April 2000
476 Pages, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-4051-3307-4
John Wiley & Sons

Irving Fisher (1867-1947), economist, Yale University teacher,
inventor, mathematician and activist reformer, was one of the most
important American economists of the first half of the 20th
century. On the 50th anniversary of his death in May of 1998, a
large gathering of economists met at Yale to reassess
Fisher's enormous scientific contribution. Such a
reevaluation was facilitated by welcomed republication of all of
Fisher's books and articles in 14 volumes the previous year.
The offices of the Cowles Foundation at Yale University were made
available for the presentations and the Cowles Foundation directors
and administrators assisted with the preparation of this important
volume.

This book consists of original papers explaining Fisher's
technical contributions to econometrics, a reassessment of his
prescient and much neglected textbook on economics, his theories of
capital and interest, his debt-deflation theory of depression, the
various financial devices that he developed to improve governance
and policy-making, and finally his eugenic crusades that included
the prohibition of alcoholic beverages and healthy diets.
Fisher's ideas were so advanced for his time that many of the
contributors to these volumes delight in pointing out how the
recent financial inventions in the world economy are catching up to
the insights that Fisher provided decades earlier. This volume
consists of the major papers from that conference including written
versions of the comments that were presented at that time. The
contributions include original essays by Nobel Laureate, James
Tobin. Other contributions include analytic essays by distinguished
economics such as, A. J. Auerbach,William J. Barber, W. C.
Brainard, W. E. Diewert, Robert Dimand, Victor R. Fuchs, John
Geanakoplos, M. J. Graetz, Robert E. Hall, William D. Nordhaus,
Peter C. B. Phillips, John Rust, Herbert E. Scarf, M. D. Shapiro,
J. B. Shoven, Robert J. Shiller, Martin Shubik, T. N. Srinivasan,
John Whalley, and others. In addition, the editors have included
several already published biographical essays on Fisher so that the
collection will be thorough and complete. A useful scholarly index
has been prepared especially for this volume.

Frontispieces.

Acknowledgments.

Foreword (George W. Fisher).

Celebrating Irving Fisher: the Legacy of a Great Economist
(Robert W. Dimand and John Geanakoplos).

Irving Fisher (1867-1947 (James Tobin).

Irving Fisher of Yale (William J. Barber).

How to Compute Equilibrium Prices in 1891 (William C. Brainard
and Herbert E. Scarf).

Comment on William C. Brainard and Herbert E. Scarf's "How to
Compute Equilibrium Prices in 1891" (K.R. Sreenivasan).

Controlling the Price Level (Robert E. Hall)'.

Comment on Robert E. Hall's "Controlling the Price Level" (James
Tobin).

Stable Prices, Money and the Cost of Living (Martin Shubik).

Econometric Analysis of Fisher's Equation (Peter C.B.
Phillips).

Comments on "Econometric Analysis of Fisher's Equation" - by
Peter C.B. Phillips (Jon Rust).

Fisher, Keynes, and the Corridor of Stability (Robert W.
Dimand).

Fisher's Introductory Text (James Tobin).

Fisher's The Nature of Capital and Income (James Tobin).

Irving Fisher's Spending (Consumption) Tax in Retrospect (John
B. Shoven and John Whalley).

Comments on John B. Shoven and John Whalley's "Irving Fisher's
Spendings (Consumption ) Tax in Retrospect (Alan J. Aurebach).

Comments on John B. Shoven and John Whalley's, "Irving Fisher's
Spendings (Consumption) tax in Retrospect" (Michael J. Graetz).

The Ideal Inflation-Indexed Bond and Irving Fisher's Impatience
theory of Interest with Overlapping Generations (John
Geanakoplos).

Comments on John Geanakoplos's "The Ideal Inflation-Indexed Bond
and Irving Fisher's Impatience Theory of Interest with Overlapping
Generations" (Robert J. Shiller).

Index Number Theory Using Differences Rather Than Ratios (W.
Erwin Diewert).

Comment on W. Erwin Diewert's, "Index Number Theory Using
Differences Rather Than Ratios" (Matthew D. Shapiro).

Irving Fisher and the Contribution of Improved Longevity to
Living Standards 9William D. Nordhaus).

Comments on William D. Nordhaus's, "Irving Fisher and the
Contribution of Improved Longevity to Living Standards" (Robvert W.
Dimand).

Comments on William D. Nordhaus's, "Irving Fisher and the
Contribution of Improved Longevity to Living Standards: (T. N.
Srinivasan).

Health, Government, and Irving Fisher (Victor R. Fuchs).

Does "Health Promotion" Really Promote Health (Alvan R.
Feinstein).

Irving Fisher, Victor Fuchs, and the Health-Government Tangle
(Richard Zeckhauser).

Index.
Robert W. Dimand is a Professor of Economics at Brock
University, St. Catharines, Ontario, where he holds a Chancellor's
Chair for Research Excellence. His research is on the history of
macroeconomics, of game

theory, and of women in economics.

John Geanakoplos is the James Tobin Professor of
Economics at Yale University, New Haven, CT, where he is the
Director of the Cowles Foundation for Research in Economics. His
research is in economic theory and mathematical economics, with a
focus on general equilibrium with incomplete markets.

R. W. Dimand, Brock University, Canada; J. Geanakoplos, Yale University