How crises shaped economic ideas and policies: wiser after the events?
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cham [u.a.]
Springer
2015
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Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XIII, 222 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9783319168708 |
Internformat
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adam_text | Contents
1 Introduction: Delusions and Lessons............................... 1
1.1 Crises in the Nile and the Rhine............................ 1
1.2 Is the History of Economic Thought Any Useful?.............. 5
1.3 The Historical Divide....................................... 6
1.3.1 Pre-modem Period: Small Scale of Production—Low
Factor Mobility...................................... 9
1.3.2 Modem Period: Large Scale of Production—Increased
Factor Mobility...................................... 9
1.4 Plan of the Book........................................... 10
References....................................................... 11
2 Forms of Economic Theories and Crises............................ 13
2.1 The Relationship Between Crises and Theories.............. 13
2.1.1 Organic Theories.................................... 13
2.1.2 Amendments and Insistence........................... 14
2.1.3 Scale and Relevance................................. 15
2.2 Forms of Economic Thinking................................. 16
2.3 A Typology of Crises....................................... 17
2.3.1 Supply-Side Crises.................................. 17
2.3.2 Demand Crises....................................... 18
2.4 What Constitutes a Crisis?................................. 21
2.4.1 Crisis Thresholds................................... 21
2.4.2 Repression.......................................... 21
2.4.3 Reaction Patterns................................... 22
References....................................................... 23
3 How Old Are Economics?........................................... 25
3.1 Economic Functions in the Ancient World.................... 25
3.2 The First Big Crisis: Famine in Ancient Egypt.............. 26
3.3 Market Lessons from the Crisis: How Ancient Athens Avoided
Famines.................................................... 28
3.4 Economic Crises in Ancient Greece.......................... 29
3.4.1 Money Creation...................................... 29
3.4.2 Money Corrosion..................................... 30
vii
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3.4.3 Lending and Debt Crises.....................
3.4.4 Taxation and Representation.................
3.5 The Evolution of Economic Thinking..................
3.5.1 Plato’s Economic Advice.....................
3.5.2 Xenophon’s Economic Organization............
3.5.3 Aristotle’s Economic Philosophy.............
3.6 Modes of Production and Economic Thinking in the
Ancient East.........................................
3.6.1 Eastern Empires..............................
3.6.2 Modes of Production.........................
References.................................................
Economic Crises and Practices in the Roman and Byzantine
Era........................................................
4.1 Expansion Without Innovation........................
4.2 Crises in the Roman Empire..........................
4.2.1 Lending and Housing Crises..................
4.2.2 Famines and Government Policy...............
4.2.3 The Crisis Under Diocletian.................
4.3 Currency Reform in Byzantium.........................
4.4 Lending and Taxation.................................
4.5 Byzantium’s Pioneering Economic Thought...............
4.5.1 Institutional Continuity....................
4.5.2 Commerce....................................
4.5.3 More Freedom in Production..................
4.5.4 Greater Secularization of Power.............
References...................................................
Economic Theories and Practices in Medieval Europe.........
5.1 Production and Economic Rules Under Feudalism.......
5.2 A Century of Disaster and Change....................
5.2.1 The Emergence of Trade and Banking..........
5.3 Taxation and Sovereign Debt.........................
5.3.1 Tax Crises and Representation...............
5.3.2 Taxation in Late Middle Ages................
5.3.3 From Representation to Revolution...........
5.3.4 Types of Taxation...........................
5.3.5 Debt and Deficits...........................
5.4 From Autarky to Trade................................
5.4.1 Theories of Money and Trade.................
5.4.2 Class Oriented Theories......................
5.4.3 Church Reform...............................
5.4.4 Social Positivism............................
5.4.5 The Advent of Reason.........................
References.................................................
Contents ix
6 Economics Before the Industrial Revolution......................... 69
6.1 The Political Economy in England............................. 69
6.1.1 Hobbes’s Theory of State............................. 70
6.1.2 Locke’s Political and Economic Theories.............. 71
6.2 Physiocracy in France........................................ 73
6.2.1 Physiocracy.......................................... 73
6.2.2 Dissemination of Physiocratic Theories............... 75
6.3 Machines and Measurement..................................... 76
6.3.1 Engineering as an Economic Force..................... 76
6.3.2 Measurement as an Economic Tool...................... 77
6.4 Early Economic Crises........................................ 77
6.4.1 The Dutch “Tulipmania” (1636-1637)................... 77
6.4.2 The Monetary Crisis in England, 1690................ 78
6.4.3 The Financial Crisis in England, 1720............... 79
6.4.4 The Financial Crisis in France, 1721................ 80
6.4.5 Alternative Responses to the Crises.................. 80
6.5 Repression as Crisis: Slavery and Convenient Theories........ 81
6.5.1 Slavery in the Antiquity............................. 81
6.5.2 Slavery in the Modem Era............................. 83
References......................................................... 85
7 The Industrial Revolution and the Foundation of Classical
Economics.......................................................... 87
7.1 The Ascent of Industry and the New Economic Theories......... 87
7.1.1 Social Turmoil and Balances.......................... 88
7.1.2 England on the Rise.................................. 88
7.1.3 The Gap with the East................................ 89
7.2 Industrial Revolution: A Tale of Two Countries............... 90
7.2.1 Could It Have Been France?........................... 90
7.2.2 Why It Was England................................... 91
7.3 Adam Smith: The Economics of Optimism....................... 96
7.4 Malthus: The Dismal Economics................................ 98
7.5 Ricardo: The Economics of Accumulation....................... 99
References........................................................ 100
8 Crises and Theories After the Industrial Revolution............... 103
8.1 The First Crisis of Capitalism and the Emergence of Socialist
Ideas....................................................... 103
8.2 The Emergence of Economic Thought in Germany................ 105
8.3 Marxist Economic Theory..................................... 107
8.3.1 Key Concepts in Marxism............................. 107
8.3.2 The Collapse of Capitalism........................ 109
8.3.3 Structure of the Communist Economy.................. Ill
8.4 Crises and Economic Unions.................................. 112
x Contents
8.5 New Schools of Economic Thought........................... 113
8.5.1 History Matters.................................... 114
8.5.2 Freedom Matters.................................... 114
8.5.3 Economics Matter, in the United States............ 115
References....................................................... 116
9 From Accumulation to Distribution............................... 119
9.1 The Role of the State in Classical Economics.............. 119
9.2 From Production to Distribution Theories.................. 121
9.2.1 Utilitarianism..................................... 121
9.2.2 Mill’s Escape Route: Individual Freedom
and the Common Good................................ 123
9.2.3 Pareto’s Criterion: Dismissing Asymmetrical
Change............................................. 123
9.2.4 The Birth of Welfare Economics..................... 124
9.3 The Extremes of Utilitarianism........................... 125
9.3.1 Maximizing the Utility of the Have-Nots: “Support
the Poor”.......................................... 125
9.3.2 Maximizing the Utility of the Elites: “Support the
Rich”.............................................. 126
9.3.3 Minimizing the Utility of the Elites: “Suppress the
Rich”.............................................. 126
9.3.4 Minimizing the Utility of Have-Nots: “Suppress
the Poor”........................................ 127
9.4 The Classical Economists and the Social Classes........... 128
9.5 Theories of the Middle Class............................... 130
9.5.1 Marxist Theories on the Middle Class............... 130
9.5.2 Evolutionary Theories.............................. 131
9.5.3 Pareto’s Social Hierarchy.......................... 132
9.5.4 Neo-Marxist Revisionism............................ 133
9.6 Classical Economics: Heyday and Crisis, 1890-1930......... 134
9.6.1 The Perfect Equilibrium.......................... 135
9.6.2 Gradual Equilibrium................................ 136
9.6.3 The Role of Money.................................. 137
9.6.4 The Wicksellian Wedge . ........................... 137
References....................................................... 138
10 The Great Crisis and the Theory of Keynes....................... 141
10.1 The Great Crisis in 1929................................... 141
10.1.1 The Crash of 1929 in the US........................ 142
10.1.2 Missing Theories................................... 143
10.2 Conflicting Interpretations of the Great Crisis............ 144
10.2.1 Marxist Contemplation.............................. 144
10.2.2 Liberal Counselling................................ 144
10.2.3 The Emergence of the Keynesian Theory.............. 145
Contents xi
10.2.4 The Cambridge Precursors.............................. 146
10.2.5 The Illusion of Automatic Rebalancing................. 147
10.3 Measuring the Economy and the Policy Effects.................. 148
10.3.1 National Accounts..................................... 148
10.3.2 Estimated Models...................................... 149
10.4 Business Cycle Theories....................................... 151
10.4.1 Keynesian Multipliers................................. 151
10.4.2 The Theory of Creative Destruction.................... 152
10.4.3 The Long Waves........................................ 152
References.......................................................... 153
11 Theories of Central Planning and the Socialist Crises.............. 155
11.1 Marxism and Central Planning.................................. 155
11.1.1 Unchartered Waters.................................... 155
11.1.2 Missing Markets....................................... 156
11.1.3 The Problem of “Economic Calculation”................. 157
11.2 Implementation of Central Planning............................ 158
11.2.1 Planning Failures..................................... 159
11.2.2 The Gosplan........................................... 160
11.2.3 Chinese Planning and Failures......................... 162
11.3 Critique of Central Planning and the Intermediate
Approaches.................................................... 163
11.3.1 The Criticism of the Austrian School.................. 163
11.3.2 The Benevolent Planner................................ 164
11.3.3 Inventing Virtual Markets............................. 164
11.3.4 Shadow Pricing........................................ 166
11.3.5 The Impossibility of Efficient Pricing Under
Socialism............................................. 167
11.3.6 Sraffa’s Critique..................................... 168
11.4 Was Communism an Asiatic Mode of Production?.................. 168
References.......................................................... 170
12 From Keynesian Economics to Stagflation............................. 171
12.1 The Postwar Golden Years...................................... 171
12.1.1 Reconstruction and Stability.......................... 171
12.1.2 New Divisions......................................... 172
12.2 The Mixed Economy and New Theories............................ 173
12.2.1 The Division of Economics............................. 173
12.2.2 The End of Postwar Stability.......................... 174
12.3 The Stagflation Crisis and the Monetarist Counterattack....... 176
12.4 Theories of Strategic Behavior................................ 177
12.4.1 Strategy and Credibility.............................. 178
12.4.2 Institutions and Crises............................... 178
12.4.3 Rational Choice in Social Sciences.................... 180
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12.5 The Deregulation Crisis and the Keynesian Counterattack
12.5.1 The Neoclassical Synthesis..................
12.5.2 Market Freedom and Equilibrium..............
12.5.3 Market Socialism: An Attempt of Synthesis . . . .
References.................................................
Development, Collapse and New Theories.....................
13.1 Theories of Economic Development.....................
13.1.1 The Warranted Growth Model..................
13.1.2 The Solow Growth Model......................
13.1.3 Accumulation and Growth.....................
13.1.4 Income Inequalities and Distribution........
13.2 Capital Controversies................................
13.3 Inward Theories and Outward Crises in Latin America . .
13.3.1 The Inward Development Theory...............
13.3.2 The Outward Crisis..........................
13.3.3 Currency Crises and Theories of Restructuring . .
13.4 The Debt Trap of Developing Countries................
References.................................................
Post 2008: Challenging the Foundations of Orthodoxy........
14.1 Rationality and Intertemporal Constraints Revisited. . . .
14.1.1 The Omnipresent Constraint..................
14.1.2 Constrained Governments.....................
14.1.3 Whatever Happened to Household Budget
Constraints?.................................
14.2 The Delusion of Perfect Calculation in Capitalism....
14.2.1 Theories of Imperfect Information...........
14.2.2 Chaotic Systems.............................
14.2.3 Experimental Economics......................
14.3 Inefficient Theories and Markets.....................
14.3.1 The Efficient Market Hypothesis.............
14.3.2 The Quants: Power Without Theory............
14.3.3 From Mandeville to Mandelbrot...............
14.4 Economic Imbalances: Are States Playing Ponzi-Games? .
14.4.1 The Role of Leverage and the Modigliani—Miller
Theorem......................................
14.4.2 Imbalances in the Real Economy..............
14.4.3 Wiser, but Not Yet Sufficient...............
References.................................................
Is There a Methodological Crisis in Economics?.............
15.1 Problems in Teaching Economics.......................
15.1.1 Kepler’s Lesson Forgotten...................
15.1.2 Relativity and Selectivity..................
Contents xiii
15.2 Competing Theories.......................................... 215
15.2.1 Simplicity.......................................... 215
15.2.2 The Test of Changing Conditions..................... 216
15.2.3 Keeping Score....................................... 216
15.2.4 Normative and Positive Theories..................... 216
15.2.5 Economic Agents and Roles........................... 217
15.3 How We Read Economic History?............................... 218
15.3.1 Historical Cyclicality.............................. 218
15.3.2 Historical Necessity................................ 219
15.3.3 Historicism......................................... 219
15.3.4 Cliometrics......................................... 220
15.3.5 Economic Anthropology............................... 220
15.3.6 Counterfactual History ............................. 221
References........................................................ 222
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id | DE-604.BV042540039 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T01:24:28Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9783319168708 |
language | English |
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publisher | Springer |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Christodoulakis, Nicos 1952- Verfasser (DE-588)170167143 aut Oikonomikes theōries kai kriseis How crises shaped economic ideas and policies wiser after the events? Nicos Christodoulakis Cham [u.a.] Springer 2015 XIII, 222 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Innovation (DE-588)4027089-0 gnd rswk-swf Idee (DE-588)4026475-0 gnd rswk-swf Fortschritt (DE-588)4017985-0 gnd rswk-swf Wirtschaftswissenschaften (DE-588)4066528-8 gnd rswk-swf Wissenschaftsgeschichte Fach (DE-588)4190111-3 gnd rswk-swf Wirtschaftswissenschaften (DE-588)4066528-8 s Wissenschaftsgeschichte Fach (DE-588)4190111-3 s Innovation (DE-588)4027089-0 s Fortschritt (DE-588)4017985-0 s Idee (DE-588)4026475-0 s 1\p DE-604 Digitalisierung UB Regensburg - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027974113&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Christodoulakis, Nicos 1952- How crises shaped economic ideas and policies wiser after the events? Innovation (DE-588)4027089-0 gnd Idee (DE-588)4026475-0 gnd Fortschritt (DE-588)4017985-0 gnd Wirtschaftswissenschaften (DE-588)4066528-8 gnd Wissenschaftsgeschichte Fach (DE-588)4190111-3 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4027089-0 (DE-588)4026475-0 (DE-588)4017985-0 (DE-588)4066528-8 (DE-588)4190111-3 |
title | How crises shaped economic ideas and policies wiser after the events? |
title_alt | Oikonomikes theōries kai kriseis |
title_auth | How crises shaped economic ideas and policies wiser after the events? |
title_exact_search | How crises shaped economic ideas and policies wiser after the events? |
title_full | How crises shaped economic ideas and policies wiser after the events? Nicos Christodoulakis |
title_fullStr | How crises shaped economic ideas and policies wiser after the events? Nicos Christodoulakis |
title_full_unstemmed | How crises shaped economic ideas and policies wiser after the events? Nicos Christodoulakis |
title_short | How crises shaped economic ideas and policies |
title_sort | how crises shaped economic ideas and policies wiser after the events |
title_sub | wiser after the events? |
topic | Innovation (DE-588)4027089-0 gnd Idee (DE-588)4026475-0 gnd Fortschritt (DE-588)4017985-0 gnd Wirtschaftswissenschaften (DE-588)4066528-8 gnd Wissenschaftsgeschichte Fach (DE-588)4190111-3 gnd |
topic_facet | Innovation Idee Fortschritt Wirtschaftswissenschaften Wissenschaftsgeschichte Fach |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027974113&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT christodoulakisnicos oikonomikestheorieskaikriseis AT christodoulakisnicos howcrisesshapedeconomicideasandpolicieswiseraftertheevents |