The Economics of John Stuart Mill

Hollander, Samuel. The Economics of John Stuart Mill, 2 vols. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1985.

From the publisher:

J.S. Mill plays a central role in the development of classical political economy in the nineteenth century. Hollander follows the course of that development over fifty years of Mill’s career, from the death of David Ricardo in 1823 to Mill’s own death in 1873. As in Hollander’s acclaimed works on Adam Smith and David Ricardo, this studey emphasizes economic methodology and social philosophy, examined in light of Mill’s own preoccupations.

He argues that Mill’s methodological principle and practice are consistent from 1830 onwards, a position that disputes currently held opinion. He also demonstrates that Mill denied the predictive ability of economic science, and thereby dismisses as irrelevant the charges of some critics that Mill championed ‘scientism.’

Throughout his study, Hollander places Mill within appropriate intellectual contexts. He identifies Mill’s debts to Ricardo and to James Mill, examines his reactions to the Cambridge inductivist critics of orthodoxy and to the later ‘historical’ school writers, and his attitude towards the beginnings of mathematical economics.

The central chapters on theory focus on allocation (including international trade) and economic growth, and the connection between the two. Hollander analyses Mill’s remarkable investigation of the process of price formation under competitive and non-competitive conditions and his qualifications to the law of markers and the quantity theory. Other chapters deal with the roles of governments and economic organization, monetary policy, and social philosophy.

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