Faculty
Paul Zarembka
Professor of Economics
Office: 443 Fronczak Hall
Phone: (716) 645-2121 x-438
E-mail: zarembka@buffalo.edu
Website: Professor Zarembka's Website
Education
- Ph.D. (1967) University of Wisconsin
- M.S. (1967) University of Wisconsin
- B.S. (1964) Purdue University
Research Interests
- Marxist Theory
- U.S. Labor History
- Economic Development
Selected Publications
- "On the Empirical Relevance of the CES Production Function," Review of Economics and Statistics (1970)
- Toward A Theory Of Economic Development, Holden-Day (1972)
- (editor) Frontiers in Econometrics, Academic Press (1974)
- "Capital Heterogeneity, Aggregation, and the Two-Sector Model",Quarterly Journal of Economics (1975)
- "Transformation of Variables in Econometrics", The New Palgrave: A Dictionary of Economics (1987)
- "The Development of State Capitalism in the Soviet Union", Research in Political Economy (1992)
- "Accumulation of Capital, its Definition: A Century after Lenin and Luxemburg", Value, Capitalist Dynamics and Money, Research in Political Economy (2000)
- "Rosa Luxemburg's Accumulation of Capital: Critics try to bury the Message", Bringing Capitalism Back for Critique by Social Theory, Current Perspectives in Social Theory (2002)
- "The Declining Importance of Hegel for Marx: J.D. White's Provocative Work", Historical Materialism, No. 8 (2002)
- "Lenin as Economist of Production: A Ricardian Step Backwards", Science & Society (2003)
- (editor) The Hidden History of 9-11-2001, JAI/Elsevier Science (2006); paperback 2nd. edition, Seven Stories Press (2008)
Other Contributions and Distinctions
- Co-Editor (with M. Brown and K. Sato), Essays in Modern Capital Theory, North-Holland (1976)
- Series Editor, Research in Political Economy, JAI/Elsevier Press (1977-present)
- Fulbright-Hayes Scholar, Academy of Economics, Poznan, Poland (1979)
- Who's Who is America, various editions
- Who's Who in Economics, various editions
- Who's Who in Finance & Business, various editions
- Who's Who in American Education, various editions