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Maurice Herbert Dobb (September 3, 1900 - 1976), economist, Lecturer 1924-1959 and Reader 1959-1976 at Cambridge University; Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge 1948-76.
Maurice Dobb was an economist who primarily was involved in the interpretation of neoclassical economic theory from a Marxist point of view.
While neither Maurice Dobb nor any other Cambridge don was involved in actual recruitment to the KGB he did have a part to play in the case histories of Kim Philby, Anthony Blunt and other members of the 'Ring of Five' British traitors, by his promotion, amongst Cambridge undergraduates, of Soviet-style Communism.
Publications
- Capitalist Enterprise and Social Progress, 1925.
- Russian Economic Development since the Revolution, 1928
- Wages, 1928
- "Economic Theory and the Problems of a Socialist Economy", 1933, EJ.
- Political Economy and Capitalism: Some essays in economic tradition, 1937
- Marx as an Economist, 1943
- Studies in the Development of Capitalism, 1946
- Soviet Economic Development Since 1917, 1948
- Some Aspects of Economic Development, 1951
- On Economic Theory and Socialism, 1955
- An Essay on Economic Growth and Planning, 1960
- Papers on Capitalism, Development and Planning, 1967
- Welfare Economics and the Economics of Socialism, 1969
- "The Sraffa System and Critique of the Neoclassical Theory of Distribution", 1970, De Economist
- Socialist Planning: Some problems. 1970
- Theories of Value and Distribution Since Adam Smith, 1973.
- "Some Historical Reflections on Planning and the Market", 1974, in Abramsky, editor, Essays in Honour of E.H.Carr
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