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Ramesh Chandra

    The Kenya Project
    REFLECTION OF LIFE
    Allyn Abbott Young
    Reflections on the Future of Capitalism
    Endogenous Growth in Historical Perspective
    REVERBERANCE
    • 2024

      Reflections on the Future of Capitalism

      From Karl Marx to Amartya Sen

      • 436 pages
      • 16 hours of reading

      The book delves into the perspectives of nine influential economists, tracing the evolution of economic thought regarding capitalism's development and future. Each chapter focuses on a different thinker, including Karl Marx and J. M. Keynes, highlighting their unique influences and contrasting views on capitalism. By examining these diverse insights, the author provides a critical assessment of how these historical ideas resonate in today's economic landscape, offering a comprehensive understanding of the ongoing discourse surrounding capitalism's role in society.

      Reflections on the Future of Capitalism
    • 2022

      REVERBERANCE

      • 134 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      This anthology presents a collection of poems that explore essential life principles, guiding readers toward a path of joy, achievement, and honor. Through its verses, it aims to inspire and uplift, highlighting the beauty of resilience and the pursuit of a meaningful existence.

      REVERBERANCE
    • 2022

      REFLECTION OF LIFE

      • 132 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      Exploring diverse aspects of life, this anthology features poems that inspire and provoke thought. Each piece serves as a powerful healer, offering solace during moments of melancholy and depression, making it a meaningful collection for those seeking comfort and reflection.

      REFLECTION OF LIFE
    • 2021

      Endogenous Growth in Historical Perspective

      From Adam Smith to Paul Romer

      • 344 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      Focusing on endogenous growth theory, this book offers a historical perspective from Adam Smith to Paul Romer, highlighting the evolution of economic thought. It fills a significant gap in literature by providing a comprehensive analysis of various contributions, critically evaluating each author's ideas within a unified framework. The text serves as a valuable resource for both seasoned and graduate economists, presenting a detailed comparison of the origins, mechanisms, conclusions, and policy implications of these influential models.

      Endogenous Growth in Historical Perspective
    • 2019

      Allyn Abbott Young

      • 364 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      Allyn Young's legacy is marked by his influential teaching and mentorship, impacting prominent economists like Frank Knight and Edward Chamberlin. His most notable published work focuses on increasing returns and economic progress. Young gained international recognition as part of the American delegation at the Paris peace negotiations post-WWI. Although his contributions to economics and public service were significant, contemporary interest centers more on his intellectual contributions. At his death, he was developing two treatises on Money and Economics, but neither was recovered after his family left London.

      Allyn Abbott Young
    • 2006

      The Kenya Project

      • 319 pages
      • 12 hours of reading

      Readers of adventure novels, thrillers When Lucy inherits her father's millions, the best of everything that life can offer seems to beckon for her and her younger husband, Richard. Richard, however, who has not yet learned his trade as a stockbroker, is determined to prove his masculine credentials in the running of a small engineering firm that Lucy has added to an already bulging portfolio. Richard can hardly believe his luck when an export opportunity is presented to him by a group of Kenyan businessmen. He soon discovers, however, that the whole project is fraught with peril, though he could never have guessed the final outcome, and the strangely ambiguous position Lucy occupies at the centre of it all. But is she driven by love, or greed, or simply the naked egoism we more naturally think of when it comes to men in a business world? The answer is as surprising as it is intriguing.

      The Kenya Project