'There can be no doubt that The Economics of Adam Smith is the most important work on the Wealth of Nations that has been published for many decades and that Professor Hollander must be disregarded as in the front rank of authorities on Adam Smith. The fundamental importance of the book is that it is a comprehensive analytical study of the economics of Adam Smith himself instead of the various versions of his theories as interpreted or developed by subsequent writers. Professor Hollander ... provides a long overdue re-assessment and a restoration of emphasis.'(Economic Journal) '... a major contribution to Smithsonian scholarship, which imposed a new perspective on certain unresolved puzzles in the Wealth of Nations.'(Economica) '... based on a formidable knowledge ... should prove of interest to people both inside and outside the economic profession.'(Times Educational Supplement) 'Of the many works which have been written on the economics of Adam Smith, this seems to me to be by far the best I have ever read. It shows an exhaustive acquaintance with the text to be discussed, a profound analytical grasp of the various issues raised by its interpretation, and a logical classification of its subject matter which is intellectually extremely satisfying ... one of the most distinguished essays in the history of economic thought of the last quarter of a century.- Lord Robbins