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The neo-Ricardian school is an economic school that derives from the close reading and interpretation of David Ricardo by Piero Sraffa, and from Sraffa's critique of neo-classical economics as presented in his The Production of Commodities by Means of Commodities, and further developed by the neo-Ricardians in the course of the Cambridge capital controversy. It particularly disputes neo-classical theory of income distribution.
Prominent neo-Ricardians are usually held to include Giorgio Gilibert.
The school partially overlaps with post-Keynesian and neo-Marxian economics.
Institutional economics, Feminist economics, Keynesian economics, Ecological economics, Post-Keynesian economics
University of Cambridge, London School of Economics, John Maynard Keynes, Ludwig Wittgenstein, World War I
Economics, Feminist economics, Neoclassical economics, Keynesian economics, History of economic thought
Adam Smith, Neoclassical economics, Keynesian economics, History of economic thought, John Stuart Mill