The history of a concept sometimes discovers mental representations and particular expressions that reveal distinct theoretical developments. Although the economic analysis in terms of “property rights” started in the early 1960’s by Alchian, Coase and Demsetz, the concept itself was familiar to Classical Political Economists. In its broad sense, the definition of property rights was present in Adam Smith’s Lectures of 1762-63. It evolved significantly with Ricardo (1817), Senior (1836), and J.S. Mill (1848). Recalling the ideas of the Classics about the rights to own and use the basic production factors -namely labour, land and capital- and their output, will considerably improve the current debate.
CITATION STYLE
Zouboulakis, M. (2016). Fundamentación de los derechos de propiedad: Clásicos y modernos. Revista de Economia Institucional, 18(34), 13–28. https://doi.org/10.18601/01245996.v18n34.02
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