Fred Moseley

  • Professor Emeritus of Economics

Fred Moseley is one of the foremost scholars in the world today on Marxian economic theory (as a theory of capitalism). He has written or edited seven books, including The Falling Rate of Profit in the Postwar United States Economy (1991), Marx’s Logical Method: A Reexamination (1993), Heterodox Economic Theories: True or False?(1995), New Investigations of Marx’s Method (1997), and Marx’s Theory of Money: Modern Appraisals (2004). He has also published dozens of articles in many scholarly journals. His works have been translated into eight languages (Spanish, German, Swedish, Italian, Portuguese, Greek, Korean, and Farsi). He has participated in conferences all over the world and has been a guest lecturer in England, Holland, Spain, Italy, Brazil, and Korea, and numerous times in Mexico.

In 1991, Moseley organized the International Symposium on Marxian Theory, a distinguished international and interdisciplinary group of five economists and three philosophers from five different countries, which has met annually since then, including five times at ÓûÂþɬ. This internationally renowned group has produced five books; a sixth book will be published in 2004.

Moseley served as the book review editor of the Review of Radical Political Economy for a decade (1986 to 1995) and is currently on the editorial board of the International Journal of Political Economy.

Moseley teaches a senior seminar on the History of Economic Thought, intermediate courses on Marxian Economic Theory and U.S. Economic History, and Introduction to Macroeconomics. He says that he especially enjoys teaching economics at ÓûÂþɬ, because the students are very intelligent young women from all over the world, who are eager to learn.

Areas of Expertise

Marxism; postwar U.S. economy

Education

  • Ph.D., University of Massachusetts
  • B.S., Stanford University