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Neoclassical Revolution

The Neoclassical Revolution was the emergence of marginal theory of value as the central explanation for explaining the origin of value.

The theory of marginal utility was about 1870 being independently developed on somewhat similar lines by William Stanley Jevons in England, Carl Menger in Austria and Leon Walras in Switzerland.

Earlier writers, notably HH Gossen had also discovered of the connection between value in exchange and final (or marginal) utility, but it was ultimately forced into notice by the three European economists.

Previously it had been believed that the value of an item was a reflection of the work and resources devoted to making it, the cost-of-production theory of value. This was widely believed by classical economists.

Neo-classical economists accepted the marginal utility explanation for value and grafted this insight on to classical economics. The Austrian School used marginal utility as a starting point in breaking away from the stress that other economic schools put on analysis of economic data.

Referenced By

Austrian School | Austrian economics | Carl Menger | Economics articles (master list) | History of Economic Thought | List of economics articles | List of economics topics | Marginal theory of value | Neo-classical economics | Neoclassical Revolution | Neoclassical economics | Opportunity cost | Principles of Economics | William Stanley Jevons

 

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Neoclassical Revolution".

 

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