Read more
List of contents
1. Introduction and overview; 2. Foundations of input-output analysis; 3. Input-output models at the regional level; 4. Organization of basic data for input-output models; 5. The commodity-by-industry approach in input-output models; 6. Multipliers in the input-output model; 7. Supply-side models, linkages, and important coefficients; 8. Decomposition approaches; 9. Nonsurvey and partial-survey methods - fundamentals; 10. Nonsurvey and partial-survey methods - extensions; 11. Social accounting matrices; 12. Energy input-output analysis; 13. Environmental input-output analysis; 14. Mixed and dynamic models; 15. Additional topics; Postscript.
About the author
Ronald E. Miller is Professor Emeritus of Regional Science at the University of Pennsylvania. A pioneer in the development of interregional input-output models, his research providing key insights about interregional feedback effects and many other features of regional economic models spans five decades.Peter D. Blair is Distinguished Senior Fellow in the Schar School of Policy and Government, George Mason University. Published widely in many fields, his career includes management, research and teaching at the National Academy of Sciences, the Congressional Office of Technology Assessment, Technecon Analytic Research and the University of Pennsylvania.
Summary
The fully updated new edition of this classic textbook is an essential reference for students and scholars in applied economics, regional science and public policy. It blends extensive development of the basic and advanced concepts of input-output analysis with applications and illustrations of these concepts with real-world data.
Additional text
'It is highly difficult if not impossible for input-output researchers to write a new textbook on the field, because they already have at hand Input-Output Analysis: Foundations and Extensions. This book is so comprehensive in coverage and continuously evolving for updates, allowing very little room for other scholars to supplement. The book also embraces readers of differing levels and areas of interest, from university undergraduates to professionals, from trade economists to environmental analysts, which again makes it hard to imagine a substitute of any kind. The book is really a must-read literature.' Satoshi Inomata, The President of the International Input-Output Association & Chief Senior Researcher of Institute of Developing Economies, JETRO