Linear programming and economic analysis / Robert Dorfman, Paul A Samuelson and Robert M Solow .
Material type:
- 0486654915
- 9780486654911
- 20 330.0151 DOL 1958
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330.01 SCE 1996 Essentials of economics / | 330.01 SCE 1996 Essentials of economics / | 330.0151 DOL 1958 Linear programming and economic analysis / | 330.0151 DOL 1958 Linear programming and economic analysis / | 330.0151 DOL 1958 Linear programming and economic analysis / | 330.015195 BEB 1996 Bayesian analysis in statistics and econometrics : | 330.018 SHP 1996 Project planning for developing economies / |
Includes indexes.
Introduction --
Basic concepts of linear programming --
The valuation problem ; Market solutions --
The algebra of linear programming --
The transportation problem --
Linear-programming analysis of the firm --
Application to the firm ; Valuation and duality --
Nonlinear programming --
The statical leontif system --
The statical leontief system (continued) --
Dynamic aspects of linear models --
Efficient programs of capital accumulation --
Linear programming and the theory of general equilibrium --
Linear programming and welfare economics --
Elements of game theory --
Interrelations between linear programming and game.
Designed primarily for economists and those interested in management economics who are not necessarily accomplished mathematicians, this text offers a clear, concise exposition of the relationship of linear programming to standard economic analysis. The research and writing were supported by The RAND Corporation in the late 1950s. Linear programming has been one of the most important postwar developments in economic theory, but until publication of the present volume, no text offered a comprehensive treatment of the many facets of the relationship of linear programming to traditional economic theory. This book was the first to provide a wide-ranging survey of such important aspects of the topic as the interrelations between the celebrated von Neumann theory of games and linear programming, and the relationship between game theory and the traditional economic theories of duopoly and bilateral monopoly. Modern economists will especially appreciate the treatment of the connection between linear programming and modern welfare economics and the insights that linear programming gives into the determinateness of Walrasian equilibrium. The book also offers an excellent introduction to the important Leontief theory of input-output as well as extensive treatment of the problems of dynamic linear programming. Successfully used for three decades in graduate economics courses, this book stresses practical problems and specifies important concrete applications.
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