Population, Capital, and Growth: Selected Essays


Population, Capital, and Growth: Selected Essays
Population, Capital, and Growth: Selected Essays by Simon Kuznets

When Simon Kuznets was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1971, his citation read, in part, "...his empirically based scholarly work has led to a new and more profound insight into the economic and social structure and the process of change and development." These qualities are evident in the essays in this volume, drawn from Professor Kuznet's work of the past eight years.

The essays center on a few broad themes: population and its relation to economic growth, capital formation in long historical perspective, the broader features of modern economic growth, and recent changes in the gap between the rich and poor countries. The themes are clearly interrelated. Even a selection on the supply of and demand for economic data bears on the others, since it deals with the conditions that limit the quantitative study of economic growth. Included in the volume and published for the first time in book form is Professor Kuznet's Nobel Laureate address, "Modern Economic Growth: Findings and Reflections."



More on Amazon »


$22.95 (new) | $17.51 (used)


Lists Appeared In
The 100 Best Economics Books of All Time