Sunspots and Expectations: W. S. Jevons's Theory of Economic Fluctuations
Sandra J. Peart
Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 1991, vol. 13, issue 2, 243-265
Abstract:
W. Stanley Jevons's statistical study of periodicity has received much scrutiny (Aldrich 1987), but less attention has been given to his theoretical position on economic fluctuations, a circumstance which T. W. Hutchison justly finds surprising considering that “Jevons maintained that aggregate instability, and the distress it caused, presented profoundly serious problems, and devoted some of his most strenuous economic research to their explanation” (Hutchison 1988, p. 6). This paper takes up the challenge to examine the development of Jevons's thought on economic fluctuations from the early 1860s until his death in 1882.
Date: 1991
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