Review
'...an accessible and detailed history of social credit Angus Cameron EAEPE Newsletter 21, January 1999'It is surely time therefore, that the Social Credit analysis and prescriptionfor radical change be seriously re-visited by economists, politicians and people. The Political Economy of Social Credit and Guild Socialism is a splendid contribution to that process. Alan Armstrong, The Social Crediter Vol. 77, No. 5, September-October 1998
Product Description
This work approaches the phenomenon of guild socialism from a new perspective, focusing on the Douglas Social Credit movement. It explores the key ideas, gives an overview of the main theories and traces their subsequent history. Thoroughly researched, it provides original material relevant to the field of political economy. This early approach to non-equilibrium economics reveals the extent of the incompatibility between capitalist growth economics and social and environmental sustainability.