Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Contributors
- Dramatis Personae at the end of 1937
- Introduction and Summary
- Part I The roots
- Part II The approach of the Stockholm School
- 4 Expectation and plan: The microeconomics of the Stockholm School
- 5 Sequence analysis and optimization
- 6 There were two Stockholm Schools
- 7 On formal dynamics: From Lundberg to chaos analysis
- 8 Lundberg, Keynes, and the riddles of a general theory
- 9 Macrodynamics and the Stockholm School
- 10 Ohlin and the General Theory
- 11 The monetary economics of the Stockholm School
- 12 The Austrians and the Stockholm School: Two failures in the development of modern macroeconomics?
- 13 The political arithmetics of the Stockholm School
- 14 After the Stockholm School
- Part III The impact of the Stockholm School
- Part IV What remains of the Stockholm School?
- The Stockholm School: A non-Swedish bibliography
14 - After the Stockholm School
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2013
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- List of Contributors
- Dramatis Personae at the end of 1937
- Introduction and Summary
- Part I The roots
- Part II The approach of the Stockholm School
- 4 Expectation and plan: The microeconomics of the Stockholm School
- 5 Sequence analysis and optimization
- 6 There were two Stockholm Schools
- 7 On formal dynamics: From Lundberg to chaos analysis
- 8 Lundberg, Keynes, and the riddles of a general theory
- 9 Macrodynamics and the Stockholm School
- 10 Ohlin and the General Theory
- 11 The monetary economics of the Stockholm School
- 12 The Austrians and the Stockholm School: Two failures in the development of modern macroeconomics?
- 13 The political arithmetics of the Stockholm School
- 14 After the Stockholm School
- Part III The impact of the Stockholm School
- Part IV What remains of the Stockholm School?
- The Stockholm School: A non-Swedish bibliography
Summary
This essay analyzes the late development of the Stockholm School, that is, the progress after the founding years of 1927–37, which have been dealt with in my work The Stockholm School and the Development of Dynamic Method (Hansson, 1982). That work defined the Stockholm School by the interrelated development of different dynamic methods among its members, and this process was, for the period 1927–37, an internal Swedish affair.
The analysis of the development after 1937 is still concentrated on contributions that deal with the dynamic method, but these contributions are no longer isolated from foreign influences. It is therefore not possible to speak of a school in the same strict sense as for the initial period. This paper includes contributions that relate to the ideas of the Stockholm School. However, the works must contain something original concerning the dynamic method. Hence, I look at a sequel to the Stockholm School from this limited point of view, and it is not at all excluded that the School might have had an important influence in other areas. Both Bertil Ohlin and Erik Lundberg, for example, wrote long tracts on economic policy that are obviously based on the old approach.
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- Information
- The Stockholm School of Economics Revisited , pp. 347 - 361Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1991