This Subject Includes

  • Course No: HS 137
  • Course:
  • Semester: IV
  • Title: Clasical Political Economy
  • Stream: Economics
  • .Preamble:

    This course will familiarize students with the works of three major classical thinkers –Smith, Ricardo and Marx. It will enable students to understand the historical contexts that led to the development of certain concepts, perspectives and ideologies in economics. It will also encourage critical and heterodox thinking within the discipline of economics.Course contents:Introducing classical political economy: Historical and philosophical genesis, major questions raised, neoclassical critique of classical economics; Adam Smith: Division of labour, theory of value, growth and distribution, views on trade (absolute advantage); David Ricardo: Labour theory of value, theory of rent, growth and distribution, views on trade (comparative advantage); Karl Marx: modes of production, dynamics of social change (primitive communism, slavery, feudalism, capitalism, socialism, communism, Asiatic mode of production), theory of value, surplus value and profit, simple and extended reproduction, crises of capitalism; The classical synthesis: synthesizing the ideas of Malthus, Adam Smith, Ricardo and Marx; Critique of neoclassical economics; Indian colonialism

    Texts/references:

    1. E. Secrepanti and S. Zamagni, “An Outline of the History of Economic Thought”, Second Edition, OUP, New Delhi, 2006

    2.J. Borchardt, “The People’s Marx–Abridged Popular Edition of the Three Volumes of “Capital””, (Translated by S. L. Trask), Prajasakti Book House, Hyderabad, 2011

    3. A. Smith, “An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of Wealth of Nations”, first published in 1901, Current edition, New York, 2011

    4. D. Ricardo, “On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation”, Batoche Books, Kitchener, Ontario., 2001