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2016 | Buch

Principles of Economics for a Post-Meltdown World

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This brief emphasizes the ways in which introductory economics textbooks incorrectly rely on assumptions about the free market, the rational agent model, market fundamentalism, and standard long-standing assumptions in economics, and in doing so disregard the effects of incomplete and asymmetric information on choice and on allocation, and maintain a general but flawed belief that competitive markets can always provide efficient solutions automatically. In other words, the standard economics principles textbook is anachronistic, they assume that tastes are exogenous, they overlook interdependencies and externalities not only in production but in consumption of goods, and they overlook the fact that path-dependence is a major hindrance to optimization. Mainstream principles of economics textbooks distort our worldview with immense political and cultural consequences. Students of these principles deserve a more complete perspective, and this brief critiques that conventional worldview and provides an alternative perspective, with an emphasis on free-market economics wherein the human element should be paramount and moral judgments should override market outcomes. In other words, what is important is not GNP as much as the quality of life, not institutions but how people live and fare in them. This brief argues that economics cannot be a science; it has too many ideological aspects, and in many ways conventional textbooks are not providing a true-to-life depiction of the economy. This Brief will be a reference or supplemental text for college and university students enrolled in such applied undergraduate and graduate courses and seminars in economics and economic theory.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Basic Concepts
Abstract
“Ours is a world of scarcity… A situation of scarcity is one in which goods are limited relative to desires” “Given unlimited wants…” (S&N p. 4). These assertions are influenced by the culture of the authors and certainly not one of the “truths” of economics that they claim to represent.
John Komlos
Chapter 2. Micro: Supply and Demand in the Product Markets
Abstract
A cool - headed analysis indicates that the minimum - wage debate centers primarily on issues of interpretation rather than fundamental disagreements on empirical findings (S&N p. 78). The actual cool-headed analysis indicates that this is a sensitive issue that turns on ideology and on which model one applies to the problem.
John Komlos
Chapter 3. Micro: Supply and Demand in the Factor Markets
Abstract
“There are more self-made men and women today than there were a decade ago” (S&N p. 229). There are also more poor people and more people on food stamps than there were a decade ago. The recession induced “a large expansion in the share of households with zero or negative net worth from 18.6 to 24.1 %.” In other words, a quarter of households own nothing but debt.
John Komlos
Chapter 4. Applications of Economic Principles
Abstract
“Within high-income countries, no simple law relating tax burdens and the citizenry’s well-being can do justice to the true diversity of the fiscal facts of nations” (S&N p. 305). Actually, there are a couple of patterns worth a mention.
John Komlos
Chapter 5. Macroeconomics: Economic Growth and Business Cycles
Abstract
“Japan…was unable to shake off high unemployment… after 1990” (S&N p. 369). I do not know where they get their numbers from, but Japan’s unemployment rate was between 2 and 5 % after 1990. In 2015, their unemployment rate is 3.6 % about 2 % less than in the USA. Per capita gross national income peaked in 1996.
John Komlos
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Principles of Economics for a Post-Meltdown World
verfasst von
John Komlos
Copyright-Jahr
2016
Electronic ISBN
978-3-319-27828-5
Print ISBN
978-3-319-27827-8
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-27828-5

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