Neoclassical economics triumphs over historicism in economic models debate.
The article discusses three economic models that emerged after the Gilded Age crisis in America: marginalism, liberal economic interpretation of history, and socialist historico-evolutionary economics. Marginalism, also known as neoclassical economics, became the dominant model. Thorstein Veblen's theory was not widely accepted at the time but gained influence later through his followers. The debate over historicism in economics continued among economists.