This volume forms part of a ten volume set on the origins of macroeconomics. The emergence of macroeconomics was probably the single most important development in economics in the twentieth century. The set draws on a broad, international range of sources, and encompasses works by lesser known thinkers who made significant contributions to the field, providing the definitive collection of materials on the origins of the discipline. <p><strong>Volume 9 </strong></p><p> <strong>Surveys and Policy</strong></p><p> 1. <em>Alvin H. Hansen</em> and <em>Herbert A. Tout</em>, 'Annual Survey of Business Cycle Theory: Investment and Saving in Business Cycle Theory,' <em>Econometrica</em>, 1, April 1933, pp. 119-147</p><p> 2. <em>William Fellner</em>, 'Employment Theory and Business Cycles,' in <em>AEA Surveys of Contemporary Economics</em>, Philadelphia, Blakiston, 1948, pp. 49-98</p><p> 3. <em>Henry Villard</em>, 'Monetary Theory,' in <em>AEA Surveys of Contemporary Economics</em>, Philadelphia, Blakiston, 1948, pp. 314-351</p><p> 4. <em>Barbara Wootton</em>, Full Employment, London, Fabian Publications, Research Series, No. 74, 1943</p><p> 5. <em>Nicholas Kaldor</em>, 'Quantitative Aspects of the Full Employment Problem in Britain,' Appendix C to W. H. Beveridge, <em>Full Employment in a Free Society</em>, New York, W. W. Norton, 1945, pp. 344-401</p><p> 6. <em>F. A. Burchardt, Thomas Balogh, Michal Kalecki, R. Menderhausen, E. F. Schumacher</em>, and <em>G.D. N. Worswick</em>, Economics of Full Employment, Oxford, Basil Blackwell, 1944</p>