Antonio de Viti de Marco

Antonio de Viti de Marco (30 September 1858, in Lecce – 1 December 1943, in Rome) was an Italian economist. He was professor of public finance in Rome from 1887 until 1931, when he resigned rather than take an oath of loyalty to the Fascist regime. He was a longtime editor of the Giornale degli Economisti.

Principii di economia finanziaria, 1934

He has been described as "an unyielding defender of liberalism".[1] His writings on public goods, taxation and public debt set the foundation for modern theories of public choice.[2]

References

  1. Cesarano, Filippo (1991). "as a Monetary Economist". History of Political Economy. 23 (1): 41–59. doi:10.1215/00182702-23-1-41.
  2. Buchanan 1960, pp. 24–74.

Bibliography

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