This collection of essays develops Edward Nell's influential theory of
transformational growth. Nell sets established concepts such as the
classical notion of prices of production and the wage-profit frontier
within a significant new framework that illustrates their role in the
dynamic evoution of the industrial system from its beginnings in
feudalism through the early capitalism of the family firms to the modern
system of effective demands and multiplier adjustments. The essays
present the method and its relation to the capital critique before
developing the main ideas of transformational growth through a series of
historical studies culminating in a revised theory of the multiplier.
Outlining policies which strongly affirm an expansionist approach, Nell
porposes a reconstruction of macroeconimics.