Fr. 147.00

Employers' Economics versus Employees' Economy - How Adam Smith's Legacy Obscures Public Investment in the Private Sector

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book argues that economic activity in the public sphere now underwrites private corporations, and rejects rigid adherence to traditional economic theories that no longer apply. Adam Smith's widely used "merchant's model" assumes that most investment is private, when in fact research demonstrates that public investment in the workforce through education and training far outweighs the private sector, and does not account for the growing presence of consensual pricing, the diversification of modern businesses, or the increasing internal authoritarianism of globalizing companies. With de facto public support for these adaptations undermining the universally presumed economic model, private corporations are able to increase their profits while misrepresenting the investment of their own global labor forces. This book suggests an "economy of laws" solution that balances the needed degree of central investment planning with the continuation of our pluralist economy of largely autonomous firms, principally by extending the full rights of citizens into the workplace itself.

List of contents

Chapter 1: We Invest More Than They!.- Chapter 2: The Paradoxes of Market Economics.- Chapter 3: Economics and Mis-Mathematics.-Chapter 4: Cornucopia, Inc..-Chapter 5: From Employees to Servants.- Chapter 6: A Reformed Economic Science and Economic Reform. 

About the author

John F. M. McDermott is Professor Emeritus of the State University of New York. He is the author of four previous books, two of them on economics: Corporate Society (1991) and Economics in Real Time (2004).

Summary

This book argues that economic activity in the public sphere now underwrites private corporations, and rejects rigid adherence to traditional economic theories that no longer apply. Adam Smith's widely used "merchant's model" assumes that most investment is private, when in fact research demonstrates that public investment in the workforce through education and training far outweighs the private sector, and does not account for the growing presence of consensual pricing, the diversification of modern businesses, or the increasing internal authoritarianism of globalizing companies. With de facto public support for these adaptations undermining the universally presumed economic model, private corporations are able to increase their profits while misrepresenting the investment of their own global labor forces. This book suggests an "economy of laws" solution that balances the needed degree of central investment planning with the continuation of our pluralist economy of largely autonomous firms, principally by extending the full rights of citizens into the workplace itself.

Product details

Authors John F M McDermott, John F. M. McDermott
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2017
 
EAN 9783319501482
ISBN 978-3-31-950148-2
No. of pages 191
Dimensions 156 mm x 218 mm x 17 mm
Weight 360 g
Illustrations XI, 191 p.
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Business > Economics

Wirtschaftsgeschichte, B, Arbeits- / Einkommensökonomie, Economic history, Public Economics, Economics and Finance, Labour Economics, Management science, Public finance, Labor Economics, Labor and Population Economics, bondaged labor, monopolistic competition, technical division of labor, social division of labor

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