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The influential 1936 economic treatise, 'The General Theory', was presented as a solitary work that fully endorsed the conclusions of Arthur Pigou's 'The Theory of Unemployment'.
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Based on the intellectual environment in which it was developed, which statement best characterizes the 1936 economic treatise, 'The General Theory'?
An influential economic treatise published in 1936 was developed with feedback from a circle of economists at the University of Cambridge. Within this work, how does the author position the ideas from Arthur Pigou's book, 'The Theory of Unemployment'?
A manufacturing firm pays its employees a weekly wage of $800. An employee who puts in the required effort produces goods valued at $1,500 per week. An employee who does not put in the required effort produces nothing. What is the firm's weekly revenue generated from the output of a single employee who does not put in the required effort?
Match each individual or work with their corresponding description or role related to a significant 1936 economic treatise.
The influential 1936 economic treatise, 'The General Theory', was presented as a solitary work that fully endorsed the conclusions of Arthur Pigou's 'The Theory of Unemployment'.
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An economic historian claims that the influential 1936 treatise, which included a notable critique of Arthur Pigou's 'The Theory of Unemployment', was solely the product of a single author's isolated genius. Which of the following facts about the treatise's development best challenges this historian's claim?
An economist who in 1930 wrote an optimistic essay about technology solving subsistence problems and leading to a 15-hour work week, later published an influential 1936 treatise. This later work, developed with feedback from a small group of colleagues, included a notable critique of a contemporary's book on unemployment. What does this shift in the economist's focus most strongly imply about the intervening years?