SEUIL. 1966. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 125 Pages - Quelques figures et graphismes en noir et blanc dans et hors texte. . . . Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
Con altre operette tratte dall'edizion (sic) fiorentina del 1638. Citata dagli Accademici della Crusca nel loro Vocabolario; e ora con somma diligentia rivedute, e ricorrette. a spese di Remondini di Venezia, In Bassano, 1782. In-16 p. (mm. 163x90), p. pelle coeva (abrasioni; picc. manc. al dorso), pp. XXIV,202, con 1 tabella f.t. più volte ripieg. Esempl. corto del margine superiore; qualche lieve fioritura, peraltro in buono stato.
FOUCHER. 1991. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos frotté, Intérieur frais. 143 pages. . . . Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
Collection Plein pot, Eseignement supérieur Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
PAYOT. 1925. In-16. Broché. Bon état, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 127 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
Collection Payot Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
Paris, Payot 1925 167pp., dans la collection "Payot" nr.48, br.orig., 17cm., bon état
Paris, Colin 1895 xiv + 411pp., br.orig., 19cm., cachet, bon état, G57168
Paris, Armand Colin 1899 xvi + 391pp., reliure cart. (dos en toile avec titre doré), 1e éd., 18cm.
Paris, Armand Colin 1899 xvi + 391pp., 1e éd., 19cm., br.orig., bon état
Paris, Armand Colin 1907-1911, 180x113mm, relié demi-parchemin, pièce d’auteur et de titre au dos, plats papier marbré.
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Broché, 20X14 cm, 2012, 112 pages, éditions du seuil. Très bon état.
Seuil 2012 128 pages 13 8x1 4x20 4cm. 2012. Broché. 128 pages.
Très bon état tranches fânées sinon très propre
La Documentation Française. 2001. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 83 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
JC LATTES. 1986. In-8. Broché. Etat d'usage, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 231 pages - 1er plat illustré d'une photo couleurs.. . . . Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
Calmann-Lévy. 1982. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 231 pages. Bord du 1er plat très légèrement abîmé. Annotations en page de garde.. . . . Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
'Perspectives de l'économique', Economie contemporaine, dir. par Christian Schmidt. Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
PUF. 1994. In-8. Broché. Très bon état, Couv. fraîche, Dos impeccable, Intérieur frais. 215 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
(Rare) Collection 'Major', dir. par Pascal Gauchon. Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
Princeton 1975 in8. 1975. Broché.
Bon état couverture défraîchie intérieur propre
Economica Malicorne sur Sarthe, 72, Pays de la Loire, France 1984 Book condition, Etat : Bon broché, sous couverture imprimée éditeur grand In-8 1 vol. - 354 pages
2eme tirage Contents, Chapitres : Avant-propos, vi, Texte, 348 pages - La monnaie, définition et mesure - La demande de monnaie - La création monétaire - La politique monétaire - Bibliographie papier à peine jauni, sinon bon etat
L'Académie de la Haute performance. 2022. In-8. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 165 pages. . . . Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
Préface de Lionel Barrachin Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
David Ronan & Lebrun Fabien & Vassort Patrick
Reference : R100072950
(2010)
ISBN : 2915830460
Editions l'échappée. 2010. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur acceptable. 151 pages - couverture contrepliée - quelques annotations au crayon à papier à l'intérieur du livre ne gênant pas la lecture.. . . . Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
"Collection "" Pour en finir avec "". Classification Dewey : 330-Economie"
Fort in-8 en très bon état de 777 pages Oxford. An introduction for econometricians
Hatier. 1987. In-12. Broché. Bon état, Couv. convenable, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 127 pages.. . . . Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
Collection J. BRÉMOND. Série Initiation. Classification Dewey : 330-Economie
P., Payot (Bibliothèque POlitique et Economique), 1931, fort in 8° broché, 838 pages ; index in-fine ; couverture fanée.
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Bath, R. Cruttwell, 1795. Large 4to. Contemporary boards, beautifully re-backed in contemporary style, with five raised bands, gilt lines, and gilt red leather title-label to spine. A few light marginal pencil-annotations, small library stamp to lower part of title page, otherwise a very fine copy. 8, 200 pp. + the errata slip inserted after the title-page.
First edition of this landmark work in scientific social inquiry, constituting one of the earliest microeconomic- and consumer behavior- analyses. Davies profoundly influenced social history and initiated the entire field of consumer behavior analysis, two areas of study which were to dominate 19th century economics, relevant not only to economic and social history, but also to present day economic analysis. Davies's work anticipates Eden's ""The State of The Poor"" (PMM 249) by two years. In the present work, Davies discusses in detail the causes of the poverty of agricultural labourers in England, linking the high prices of goods with poverty, and proposes measures to relieve the labourers, including linking their daily wage to the price of bread. Davies's observations demonstrated the failings of the contemporary Poor Laws and was by many seen as a direct criticism of the central policy making (or lack thereof). ""The differences in consumption of poor and rich families excited attention and often compassion, but apparently never quantitative analysis, for many centuries. Finally in England in the 1790's two very different investigators made extensive compilations of workingmen's budgets. [Davies in 1795, Eden in 1797]. Both were stimulated to this task by the distress of the working classes at this time."" (Stigler, The Early History of Empirical Studies of Consumer Behavior). In ""Was bread Giffen? The demand for food in England circa 1790"" (in Review of Economics and Statistics, 1977, Vol. 59, issue 2, pp. 225-29), Koenker developed a problem in statistical demand analysis using samples from the budgets recorded in these works. ""Two seminal budget studies by .. .Davies ... and ... Eden are employed ... to investigate the place of bread in the diets of English rural laborers at the end of the eighteenth century. Because of the considerable geographical and temporal dispersion in prices of foodstuffs found in these budgets, they afford a unique opportunity to study the influences of both prices and income on individual household consumption decisions. In particular a test is made of the famous hypothesis, attributed by Marshall to Robert Giffen, that a rise in the price of bread, ceteris paribus, increases its consumption among the lower classes."" The budget studies to which Koenker refers comprise the 70-page appendix. Davies began collecting statistical data on the poor in 1787 while a rector in the parish of Barkham, Berkshire. ""He collected six detailed budgets of 'typical' agricultural laborers living in Barkham and circulated these budgets widely to friends throughout the kingdom. Some of these correspondents were persuaded to produce similar budgets for their own localities. In 1795 Davies edited 127 of these budgets, wrote a dispassionate plea for a minimum wage law tied to the price of wheat, and published both as The Case of Labourers in husbandry."" (Koenker). In making the case for government intervention, Davies attacks rampant ignorance and prejudice toward the poor, in particular the notion that the poor are profligate creatures of habit. ""It is wonderful how readily even men of sense give in to this censure."" (p. 31).Davies's studies ""were the first examples of studies in that long and semi-honorable liberal tradition of econometrically snooping into the private lives of the poor. By the mid 19th century such studies were being conducted all over Europe by such notables as Ernst Engel, Frederick Engels, Frederick LePlay and others."" (Koenker, Applied Econometrics)David Davies (1742-1819), English clergyman and social commentator, was ordained in 1782 and became the rector of Barkham parish, where he remained incumbent until his death. Kress B2916Goldsmith 16422. Not in Einaudi.
Bath, R. Cruttwell, 1795. Large8vo. Bound in later half cloth with gilt lettering to spine. Presentation inscription from the auhtor to top of title page: ""From the Author"". Title page and first few leafes with brownspotting, otherwise a fine copy. Lacking the half title. Pp. 3-8, 200 + the errata slip inserted after the title page.
First edition of this landmark work in scientific social inquiry"" constituting one of the earliest microeconomic- and consumer behavior analyses. Davies profoundly influenced social history and initiated the entire field of consumer behavior analysis, two areas of study which were to dominate 19th century economics, relevant not only to economic and social history, but also to present day economic analysis. Davies's work anticipates Eden's ""The State of The Poor"" (PMM 249) by two years. In the present work, Davies discusses in detail the causes of the poverty of agricultural labourers in England, linking the high prices of goods with poverty, and proposes measures to relieve the labourers, including linking their daily wage to the price of bread. Davies's observations demonstrated the failings of the contemporary Poor Laws and was by many seen as a direct criticism of the central policy making (or lack thereof). ""The differences in consumption of poor and rich families excited attention and often compassion, but apparently never quantitative analysis, for many centuries. Finally in England in the 1790's two very different investigators made extensive compilations of workingmen's budgets. [Davies in 1795, Eden in 1797]. Both were stimulated to this task by the distress of the working classes at this time."" (Stigler, The Early History of Empirical Studies of Consumer Behavior). ""Was bread Giffen? The demand for food in England circa 1790"" (in Review of Economics and Statistics, 1977, Vol. 59, issue 2, pp. 225-29). Koenker developed a problem in statistical demand analysis using samples from the budgets recorded in these works. ""Two seminal budget studies by .. .Davies ... and ... Eden are employed ... to investigate the place of bread in the diets of English rural laborers at the end of the eighteenth century. Because of the considerable geographical and temporal dispersion in prices of foodstuffs found in these budgets, they afford a unique opportunity to study the influences of both prices and income on individual household consumption decisions. In particular a test is made of the famous hypothesis, attributed by Marshall to Robert Giffen, that a rise in the price of bread, ceteris paribus, increases its consumption among the lower classes."" The budget studies to which Koenker refers comprise the 70-page appendix. Davies began collecting statistical data on the poor in 1787 while a rector in the parish of Barkham, Berkshire. ""He collected six detailed budgets of 'typical' agricultural laborers living in Barkham and circulated these budgets widely to friends throughout the kingdom. Some of these correspondents were persuaded to produce similar budgets for their own localities. In 1795 Davies edited 127 of these budgets, wrote a dispassionate plea for a minimum wage law tied to the price of wheat, and published both as The Case of Labourers in husbandry."" (Koenker). In making the case for government intervention Davies attacks rampant ignorance and prejudice toward the poor, in particular the notion that the poor are profligate creatures of habit. ""It is wonderful how readily even men of sense give in to this censure."" (p. 31).Davies's studies ""were the first examples of studies in that long and semi-honorable liberal tradition of econometrically snooping into the private lives of the poor. By the mid 19th century such studies were being conducted all over Europe by such notables as Ernst Engel, Frederick Engels, Frederick LePlay and others."" (Koenker, Applied Econometrics)David Davies (1742-1819), English clergyman and social commentator, was ordained in 1782 and became the rector of Barkham parish, where he remained incumbent until his death. Kress B2916Goldsmith 16422. Not in Einaudi.
Pinter Pub Ltd 1986 15 494x2 032x23 114cm. 1986. Cartonné jaquette.
Très Bon Etat de conservation intérieur propre bonne tenue