This 1987 book brings together the series of papers Kalecki wrote,
between 1940 and his death in 1970, on economic planning, that contain
the germ of his theory of growth in a socialist economy. They also
contain an intriguing analysis of economic planning in a socialist
society. This analysis anticipates many of the tenets of the
disequilibrium school of economists of the 1970s. In his introduction,
Jan Toporowski argues that Kalecki's work on the theory of growth in a
socialist economy is incomplete and has often consequently been
misrepresented without the analysis presented in these papers, which are
in this edition. This book will be of interest to all those interested
in Kaecki's work, the economics of planning, and economic policy-making.