Fr. 147.00

Rediscovering Social Economics - Beyond the Neoclassical Paradigm

Inglese · Tascabile

Spedizione di solito entro 6 a 7 settimane

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni

This book argues that economists need to reengage with societal issues, such as justice and fairness in distribution, that inevitably arise when discussing the basic economic problem of unlimited human wants and finite resources. Approaching the problem through a history of economic thought, Johnson reexamines Adam Smith's contributions to show how they reach beyond neoclassical models that are too simplistic to reflect the growing interdependencies of market economies. He breaks down supposedly value-free neoclassical postulates to expose normative assumptions about economics and justice, demonstrating, for example, that the concept of market equilibrium is problematic because need-based behavior can produce involuntary unemployment even when a competitive labor market achieves equilibrium.

Sommario

1. The Foundations of Economics.- 2. The Political and Moral Dimension of Economics.- 3. The Moral and Social Problem of Scarcity.- 4. Social Welfare, Markets and Efficiency.- 5. Understanding Human Choice.- 6. Challenges to Homo Economicus.- 8. The Supply of Labor.- 10. Labor Market Equilibrium?.- 11. The Mondragón Alternative.-  12. Financial Markets and the Growth of Plutonomies.- 13. The Evolving Dialogue.

Info autore

Roger D. Johnson is a retired Professor of Economics from Messiah College, USA. He earned the Helen Potter Award from the Association for Social Economics for best article appearing in the Review of Social Economics in 1990.

Riassunto

This book argues that economists need to reengage with societal issues, such as justice and fairness in distribution, that inevitably arise when discussing the basic economic problem of unlimited human wants and finite resources. Approaching the problem through a history of economic thought, Johnson reexamines Adam Smith’s contributions to show how they reach beyond neoclassical models that are too simplistic to reflect the growing interdependencies of market economies. He breaks down supposedly value-free neoclassical postulates to expose normative assumptions about economics and justice, demonstrating, for example, that the concept of market equilibrium is problematic because need-based behavior can produce involuntary unemployment even when a competitive labor market achieves equilibrium.

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