000 07743cam a2200781 i 4500
003 KOHA
005 20240820162459.0
008 240610s2023 maua b 001 0 eng d
020 _a9780674270367
_q(hardcover)
040 _aTR-IsMEF
_beng
_cTR-IsMEF
_erda
050 0 0 _aHD45
_b.E26 2023
245 1 0 _aThe economics of creative destruction :
_bnew research on themes from Aghion and Howitt /
_cedited by Ufuk Akçiğit, John Van Reenen.
264 1 _aLondon, England :
_bHarvard University Press,
_c2023.
264 4 _c©2023
300 _axiii, 768 pages:
_billustrations;
_c24 cm.
336 _atext
_2rdacontent
337 _aunmediated
_2rdamedia.
338 _avolume
_2rdacarrier.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 749-751) and index (pages 753-768).
520 0 _aA stellar cast of economists examines the roles of creative destruction in addressing today’s most important political and social questions. Inequality is rising, growth is stagnant while rents accumulate, the environment is suffering, and the COVID-19 pandemic exposed every crack in the systems of global capitalism. How can we restart growth? Can our societies be made fairer? Editors Ufuk Akcigit and John Van Reenen assemble a world-leading group of social scientists and theorists to consider these questions and, in particular, how ideas about the economics of creative destruction may help solve the problems we face. Most closely associated with Joseph Schumpeter, formalized by Philippe Aghion and Peter Howitt in the 1990s, the idea of innovation as creative destruction has become foundational in economics, reaching into almost every corner of the discipline—both theoretically and empirically. Now, at a time of rapid and disorienting change, is an opportune moment to pull the disparate strands of research together to assess what has been learned and continue an intellectual project that can aid economic decision-making in the decades to come. The cutting-edge work in The Economics of Creative Destruction focuses on innovation and growth. Contributors offer illuminating insights into monopoly and inequality, the nature of the social safety net, climate change, and the ups and downs of regulation. Collectively, they suggest that governance has a role to play in capitalism, maximizing its benefits and minimizing its risks. -backover-
_chttps://www.hup.harvard.edu/books/9780674270367
650 0 _aCreative destruction
650 0 _aEconomic development
700 1 _aAkçiğit, Ufuk,
_eeditor.
700 1 _aVan Reenen, John,
_eeditor.
900 _aMEF Üniversitesi Kütüphane katalog kayıtları RDA standartlarına uygun olarak üretilmektedir / MEF University Library Catalogue Records are Produced Compatible by RDA Rules
910 _aDelbanco
942 _2lcc
_cBKS
970 0 1 _aForeword,
_cEmmanuel Macron.
_fMacron, Emmanuel,
_pxi.
970 0 1 _aIntroduction,
_fUfuk Akcigit.
_cAkcigit, Ufuk,
_cJohn Van Reenen.
_cReenen, John Van,
_p1.
970 1 2 _lI.
_tOVERVIEW.
970 1 1 _l1.
_t Innovation and Growth Policy,
_fEdmund S Phelps.
_cPhelps, S. Edmund,
_p17.
970 1 1 _l2.
_tCreative Destruction and Economic Growth,
_fUfuk Akciğit.
_cAkcigit, Ufuk,
_p21.
970 1 2 _lII.
_tCOMPETITION AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE.
970 1 1 _l3.
_tProduct Market Competition, Creative Destruction, and Innovation,
_cRachel Griffith.
_cGriffith, Rachel,
_cJohn Van Reenen.
_cVan Reenen, John.
_p43.
970 1 1 _l4.
_tInnovation, Antitrust Reinforcement, and the Inverted-U,
_cRichard Gilbert.
_cGilbert, Richard,
_cChristian Riis.
_cRiis, Christian,
_cErlend Riis.
_cRiis, Erlend,
_p77.
970 1 1 _l5.
_tInnovation Networks and Business-Stealing,
_cMatthew O Jackson.
_cO Jackson, Matthew,
_cAntoine Mayerowitz
_cMayerowitz, Antoine,
_cAbbijit V Tagade.
_cTagade, Abbijit V,
_p104.
970 1 1 _l6.
_tTrade and Innovation
_cMarc J Melitz.
_cJ Melitz, Marc,
_cStephe J. Redding.
_cRedding, J Stephen,
_p133.
970 1 2 _lIII.
_tINEQUALITY AND LABOR MARKETS
970 1 1 _l7.
_tInequality and Creative Destruction,
_cRichard, Blundell.
_cBlundell, Richard.
_cJaravel, Xavier,
_cXavier, Jaravel.
_cOtto Taivanen.
_cTaivanen, Otto,
_p175.
970 1 1 _l8.
_tLabor Market Dynamics When Ideas are Harder to Find,
_cAdrien Bilal.
_cBilal, Adrien,
_cNiklas Engbom.
_cEngbom, Niklas,
_cSimon Mongey.
_cMongey, Simon,
_cGiovanni L Violante,
_cViolante, Giovanni L,
_p221.
970 1 1 _l9.
_tWhen Workers' Skills become Unbundled: Some Empirical Consequences for Sorting and Wages,
_cOskar Nordstrom Skans.
_cSkans, Nordstrom Oskar,
_cPhilippe Chone.
_cChone, Philippe,
_cFrancis Kramarz.
_cKramarz, Francis,
_p253.
970 1 2 _lIV.
_tGROWTH MEASUREMENT AND GROWTH DECLINE.
970 1 1 _l10.
_tProductivity Slowdown: Reducing the Measure of our Ignorance,
_cTimo Boppart.
_cBoppart, Timo,
_cHuiyu Li.
_cLi, Huiyu,
_p283.
970 1 1 _l11.
_tProductivity Growth and Real Interest Rates: A Circular Relationship,
_cAntonin Bergeaud.
_cBergeaud, Antonin,
_cGilbert Cette.
_cCette, Gilbert,
_cRemy Lecat.
_cLecat, Remy,
_p306.
970 1 1 _l12.
_tThe Depth and Breadth of the Step-by-Step Innovation Framework,
_cSina T. Ateş.
_cT Ateş, Sina,
_p332.
970 1 2 _lV.
_tTHE ENVIRONMENT: GREEN INNOVATION AND CLIMATE CHANGE.
970 1 1 _l13.
_tHarnessing Creative Destruction to the Tackling of Climate Change: Purpose, Pace, Policy,
_cNicholas Stern.
_cStern Nicholas,
_p365.
970 1 1 _l14.
_tScience as a Civil Society: Implications for a Green Transition,
_cTimothy Besley.
_cBesley, Timothy,
_cTorsten Persson.
_cPersson, Torsten,
_p398.
970 1 1 _l15.
_tClimate Policy in Need of Plan B,
_cChrister Fuglesang.
_cFuglesang, Christer,
_fJohn Hassler.
_fHassler, John,
970 1 1 _l16.
_tDirected Technical Change and Environmental Economics,
_cAntoine Dechezlepetre.
_cDechezlepetre, Antoine,
_fDavid Hemous.
_fHemous, David,
_p435.
970 1 2 _lVI.
_tDEVELOPMENT AND POLITICAL ECONOMY.
970 1 1 _l17.
_tCreative Destruction, Distance to Frontier, and Economic Development,
_cMichael Peters.
_cPeters, Michael,
_fFabrizio Zilibotti,
_fZilibotti, Fabrizio,
_p475.
970 1 1 _l18.
_tSocialism, Capitalism, State Capitalism, and Innovation,
_cGerard Roland.
_cRoland, Gerard,
_p520.
970 1 1 _l19.
_tLobbying Behind the Frontier,
_cMatilde Bombardini.
_cBombardini, Matilde,
_cOlimpia Cutinelli.
_cCutinelli, Olimpia,
_cFrancesco Trebbi.
_cTrebbi, Francesco,
_p533.
970 1 1 _l20.
_tBarriers to Creative Destruction: Large Firms and Nonproductive Strategies,
_cSalome Baslandze.
_cBaslandze Salome,
_p558.
970 1 2 _lVII.
_tFINANCE.
970 1 1 _l21.
_tFinance and Growth: Firm Heterogeniety and Creative Destruction,
_cŞebnem Kalemli.
_cKalemli Şebnem.
_cFelipe, Saffie,
_cSaffie, Felipe,
_p587.
970 1 1 _l22.
_tCreative Destruction, Finance, and Firm Dynamics,
_cMurat Alp Çelik.
_cAlp Çelik, Murat,
_p611.
970 1 2 _lVIII.
_tTAXATION.
970 1 1 _l23.
_tTaxation, Innovation and Economic Growth,
_cCharles I Jones.
_cI Jones, Charles,
970 1 1 _l24.
_tThe effects of Taxes on Innovation: Theory and Empirical Evidence,
_cStefanie Stantcheva.
_cStantcheva, Stefanie,
_p653.
970 1 1 _lXI.
_tSCIENCE.
970 1 1 _l25.
_tOf Academics and Creative Destruction: Startup Advantage in the Process of Innovation
_cJulian Kolev.
_cKolev, Julian,
_cAlexis Haughey.
_cHaughey, Alexis,
_cFiona Murray.
_cMurray, Fiona,
_cScott Stern.
_cStern, Scott,
_p683.
970 1 1 _l26.
_tCreative Destruction or Destructive Creation? A Prelude to the Industrial Revolution
_cJoel Mokyr.
_cMokyr, Joel,
_p714.
970 1 2 _lConclusion:
_tThe Promise of the Creative Destruction Paradigm,
_cPhilippe Aghion,
_cAghion, Philippe.
_cPeter Howitt.
_cHowitt, Peter,
_p736.
970 0 1 _aINDEX
_p753.
999 _c37332
_d37332