1. To study the economic theories and ideas of great economic thinkers of the past; and
2. To understand and appreciate the development of contemporary economics.
• Adam Smith: Division of labour, theory of value, distribution, economic liberty, functions of state, public finance, international trade;
• Thomas Robert Malthus: Theory of Population, Theory of over production.
• David Ricardo: Theory of value, theory of rent, ideas on economic development and international trade;
• Karl Marx: Theory of Capitalist Exploitation, Labour Theory of Value, Theory of Surplus Value.
• Marshall: Definition of Economics, Economic laws, Method of study, Role of time in price determination, Ideas on consumer’s surplus, representative firm, theory of distribution, elasticities, Prime & supplementary costs.
• Keynesian Ideas: Psychological law of consumption, Marginal efficiency of capital, liquidity preference, role of fiscal policy, deficit financing, multiplier principle, theory of trade cycles.
• Kautilya
• Economic ideas of Naoroji;
• Gandhian ideas on village, khadi, trusteeship and decentralization;
1. Shrivastava, S.K., History of Economic Thought, S. Chand and Company Ltd., New Delhi.
1. Ganguli, B.N. (1977), Indian Economic Thought: A 19th Century Perspective, Tata Mc Graw Hill, New Delhi.
2. Gide, C. and G. Rist (1956), A History of Economic Doctrines (2nd Edition), George Warrop and Co. London.
3. Kautilya (1992), The Arthashastra, Edited, Rearranged, Translated and Introduced by L.N. Rangarajan, Penguin Books, New Delhi.
4. Roll, E. (1973), A History of Economic Thought, Faber, London.
5. Seshadri, G.B. (1997), Economic Doctrines, B.R. Publishing Corporation, Delhi.
6. Blaug, M. (1997), Economic Theory in Retrospect: A History of Economic Thought from Adam Smith to J.M. Keynes, (5th Edition), Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
7. Gandhi, M.K. (1947), India of My Dreams, Navjivan Publishing House, Ahmedabad.
8. Shumpeter, J.A. (1951), Ten Great Economists, Oxford University Press, New York.