Preface to the English Edition
1. Post-Keynesian Heterodoxy
1.1. Who are the post-Keynesians?
1.2. The characteristics of heterodox economics
1.3. The essential characteristics of post-Keynesian economics
1.4. The various strands of post-Keynesian theory
2. Heterodox Microeconomics
2.1. Consumer choice theory
2.2. Oligopolistic markets and the objectives of firms
2.3. The shape of cost curves
2.5. The determinants of the costing margin
2.6. Consequences for macroeconomic theory
3. A Macroeconomic Monetary Circuit
3.1. Main characteristics of post-Keynesian monetary analysis
3.2. The relationship between commercial banks and the central bank
3.3. The relationship between banks and firms
3.4. A systemic view of the monetary economy
4. The Short Period: Effective Demand and the Labour Market
4.1. Effective demand and its components
4.3. Further developments of the Kaleckian model
5. The Long Period: Old and New Growth Models
5.1. The old post-Keynesian growth models
5.2. The new Kaleckian models
5.3. Extensions and criticism of the Kaleckian model