Dear friends and colleagues: the third issue of the Italian journal Storia del Pensiero Economico (nuova serie) -- History of Economic Thought (new series) -- has just been published. For your interest, we attach the table of contents together with the abstracts of the leading articles. Any support, both in terms of subscriptions and submissions, would be greatly appreciated. For any information, please contact the following e mail address: [log in to unmask] Thanks Pier Francesco Asso and Luca Fiorito Content/Abstracts - 2005/1 Piero Bini TEORIA, CULTURA E POLITICA ECONOMICA NEGLI ANNI DEL "MIRACOLO" ITALIANO: 1953-1968 (THEORY, CULTURE AND ECONOMIC POLICY IN THE YEARS OF ITALIAN "MIRACLE": 1953-1968) In the 1950s the Italian economy underwent a spectacular stage of growth - the so called "economic miracle" - which was comparable only to the early 20th Century economic spurt under Giolitti. At the beginning of the 1960s the "economic miracle" came to a halt and was followed by a period of relative decline. This paper intends to explore the most significant contributions of the economic policy debate in these years. Important economic reforms were debated while the political and parliament majorities changed from centrism to a coalition between centre and left-wings parties. In the same period of time, from a sociological and economic point of view, an affluent and consumer society was established. In particular, this paper discusses the following topics: 1) Central Bank's monetary policy; 2) economic development of the backward regions of the South of Italy; 3) economic planning. With regard to all these themes, the paper tries to compare the theoretical analysis and policy suggestions put forward by Italian economists with the policy decisions and economic measures adopted by Governments in power. JEL Classification: B 5; B 29; E 58; E 65; P 41; R 11. Keywords: Italian economic miracle; Bank of Italy's monetary policy; Economic development of backwards regions of the South of Italy; Economic planning. Warren J. Samuels, Kirk D. Johnson and Marianne Johnson EDWIN L. GODKIN AS PRECURSOR TO HAYEK ON THE RELATION OF IGNORANCE TO POLICY This paper is the third of four parts examining the ideas of the 8th Duke of Argyll and Edwin L. Godkin that anticipate Hayek on the principle of unintended and unforeseen consequences. In this part, Godkin's Unforeseen Tendencies of Democracy (1898) and Problems of Modern Democracy (1896) are examined. We show that Godkin's approach involves a general theory of ignorance, as well as a more detailed theory of ignorance arising from inexperience. Like Argyll, Godkin agrees that ignorance, of which the principle of unintended and unforeseen consequences is itself a consequence, is fundamental to the formation of government and law. The fourth part - which will be published in the next issue of this Journal - will provide a synthesis of the ideas of Argyll, Godkin, and Hayek on unforeseen and unintended consequences. JEL Classification: B130, B310 Key Words: Argyll, Godkin, Hayek, unforeseen and unintended consequences Michele Alacevich POST-WAR ECONOMIC POLICIES FOR DEVELOPMENT: LAUCHLIN B. CURRIE AND THE WORLD BANK IN COLOMBIA Recollections of the first years of activities of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development insist on its almost natural devotion to the financing of infrastructural and directly productive projects. In general terms, this perspective is correct, still it is in part misleading to the extent that it hides perhaps more profound disagreements. The changing relations between the Bank and the head of its first general survey mission - Lauchlin B. Currie - clearly suggest that inside the Bank the exclusiveness of a directly productive loans strategy was not accepted without any discussion. In fact, even at the very beginning of the 1950s, it was questioned in favour of a broader spectrum of loans - such as, for example, waterworks and housing loans - which, albeit still sound, had a more visible social side. Through the analysis of the 1949 Colombian mission case, it can be seen that the economic policy of the Bank toward a developing member country was strictly related to an ideological position about the very nature of the loans considered, whatever the soundness of an intervention, and whatever its project or program features. JEL Classification: B29, B31, O19 Key Words: World Bank, Lauchlin Currie, Development Economics, Housing, Colombia Yuri Biondi G. ZAPPA, T. VEBLEN, J. R. COMMONS E L'IMPRESA COME ISTITUZIONE ECONOMICA (G. ZAPPA, T. VEBLEN, J. R. COMMONS ON THE FIRM AS AN ECONOMIC INSTITUTION) In the process of his own theorising (1903-1937), Gino Zappa received and elaborated the theoretical developments of the American (old) institutionalism, especially of Thorstein Veblen and John Roger Commons. These institutional connections leads Zappa to an "institutionalist turn", finally accomplished during the Thirties. His work as founder (or revolutionary) of the Italian tradition of Accounting and Economics (Economia aziendale), indeed, can be considered as an original kind of Institutional Economics, and this article compares some views of Zappa on the nature of the enterprise as economic institution with the views of two outstanding members of American institutionalism, starting from the original quotations and comments provided by the Italian economist. JEL classification : B25 ; B15 ; B31 ; B41 Keywords: Old institutional economics; Accounting and economics; Firms; Institutions. Mario Coccia (LE ORIGINI DELL'ECONOMIA DELL'INNOVAZIONE: IL CONTRIBUTO DI JOHN RAE) THE ORIGIN OF THE ECONOMICS OF INNOVATION: JOHN RAE'S CONTRIBUTION Economics of innovation plays, nowadays a fundamental role in economic theory, even though the origins of this discipline have not yet received all the attention it deserves. The purpose of this paper is to analyse the contribution of John Rae (1796- 1872), a Scottish philosopher, who in his book Statement of Some New Principles on the Subject of Political Economy, published in 1834, provides a detailed analysis of the causes of the progress of invention, and of the effects arising from it. John Rae, a classical scholar, has recently been rediscovered as a genuine precursor of the endogenous growth theory. This paper analyses Rae's Treatise by discussing his main contributions to economics in the fields of innovation, history of technology, and technical change. With a deep knowledge of the classics and general philosophy, Rae grounds his economic analysis in clearly distinguishing causes from effects and in devising an inductive method of inquiry into the sources of the wealth of nations. His solid and versatile educational background led him to put forward the discipline of the economics of innovation pointing out the nature, causes and effects of the technological progress on economic growth. JEL Classification: B11; B12; B31; B40. Keywords: John Rae; Invention; Innovation; History of Technology; Economic Growth; Economics of Innovation; Economics of Technical Change. Daniela Parisi AN ECONOMIST AND HIS LIBRARY: THE BOOKS AND NOTES OF ACHILLE LORIA (1857-1943) The description of Achille Loria's library starts from the basic idea that a collection of printed works (consisting of books, pamphlets, periodicals but also manuscript material, miscellaneous notes and correspondence) represents itself a document on the life and opinions of the owner and his environment. Achille Loria belonged to the group of representatives of Western culture who may be considered 'cosmopolitan', as is also testified by his correspondence with high profile personalities from different countries. Besides a presentation of his library, this paper will focus in particular on two unpublished letters from Irving Fisher. The letters, undated, contain considerations on some of Fisher's basic and long-standing interests: the distinction between capital and income, the definition of Economics as a natural science that advances by applying statistical methods, the issue of distributive justice in the analysis of the taxation system. JEL classification: B20, B31, B23 Keywords: Achille Loria, Irving Fisher, Ragnar Frisch