A new principles of economics: the science of markets
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London ; New York
Routledge
2023
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Ausgabe: | First published |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | xii, 505 Seiten Illustrationen |
ISBN: | 9780367557195 9780367557201 |
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adam_text | CONTENTS Introduction 1 PARTI 1 What are markets? 1. Introduction 2. Marketplaces 2.1. Marketplaces embody markets 2.2. Markets and market society 2.3. Markets, land, and labour 3. Market system 3.1. Market infrastructure and arbitrage 3.2. Markets and institutions 4. Markets: For good or bad? 5. Market economy versus capitalism 6. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 2 Economies as the science of markets 1. Introduction 2. What is science? The first-, second-, and third-person view 3. Economies, the economy, and markets 3.1. The economy as an object of science 3.2. Performativity and materiality of markets 4. Economic models as mechanistic explanations 5. Economic models triangulate cross-disciplinary data and hypotheses 6. Economics is entangled with its object:Reflexivity 7. Conclusion 9 9 10 10 11 13 14 14 15 17 18 20 21 21 23 26 26 27 29 29 31 33 37 38 40 v
Major chapter insights Notes References Contents 3 Economics and values 1. Introduction 2. Freedom, values, and markets 2.1. Freedom of choosing preferences 2.2. Freedom and social interdependence 2.3. Freedom and rationality 2.4. Freedom and social justice 3. Efficiency 3.1. Efficiency as progress 3.2. Trade-offs: Efficiency versus values 4. Markets, economists, and values 5. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 41 42 43 48 48 49 49 50 51 53 54 54 55 58 59 59 60 61 PART II 4 Evolution, ecology, economy 1. Introduction 2. Physical principles of evolution 2.1. Economic niche, environment, Earth system 2.2. Thermodynamic principles of evolution 2.3. Metabolism and growth 3. Fundamentals of evolution 3.1. Selection, fitness, adaptation 3.2. The VSR mechanism and levels of selection 4. The evolutionary economy of living systems 4.1. Evolving synergy in ecosystems and the human economy 4.2. Cultural evolution, institutions, and human ultra-sociality 5. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 5 vi Specialisation and cooperation 1. Introduction 2. Specialisation and exchange: Gains and limitations 2.1. Comparative advantage 2.2. The specialisation dilemma 67 67 68 68 70 74 77 77 80 82 82 84 88 89 89 92 99 99 100 100 102
3. Strategie interaction and power 3.1. The archetypes 3.2. Power and forced specialization 4. Externalities and the efficiency of specialisation 5. Conclusion Maj or chapter insights Notes References 6 Production and technological evolution 1. Introduction 2. Production in the technosphere 2.1. The technosphere 2.2. Production and consumption in the ecological dimension 3. Specialisation and technology 3.1. Engineering versus economic approaches to production 3.2. Production and use of technology 3.3. Technological evolution 4. Firms, technology, and specialisation 4.1. The firm as organisational form of specialisation 4.2. Technology and power in firms 5. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 104Contents 104 108 111 115 116 117 119 123 123 124 124 126 129 129 132 135 138 13 8 140 142 143 143 146 PART III 7 The economic agent 1. Introduction 2. Reframing rationality in economics 3. Brain, reason, and human sociality 3.1. The nature of the brain: Predictive and social 3.2. Reason and rationality 3.3. Emotions 4. The economic agent 4.1. Agency and agential power 4.2 Identity 4.3. Performativity 5. Mechanisms of choice and valuation 5.1. Imitation and learning 5.2. Wanting, liking, and happiness 5.3. Creativity and entrepreneurial action 6. Conclusion 153 153 154 155 155 15 8 160 161 161 163 165 166 166 168 169 171 vii
Contents 172 173 177 Major chapter insights Notes References 8 Networks and social interaction 1, Introduction 2. A short primer of network analysis 2.1. Fundamental types of network configurations in the context of markets 2.2. Dimensions of networks 3. Network structure and dynamics 3.1. Network structure and agential power 3.2. Social capital 3.3. Boundaries in networks: In-group/out-group 3.4. Network dynamics and frequency-dependent mechanisms 4. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 185 185 186 186 190 194 194 197 201 203 207 208 209 211 9 Institutions 216 1. Introduction 216 2. Following an institution 217 2.1. Cognitive mechanisms of institutionalisation 217 2.2. Institutions and emotions 220 3. Performing institutions 221 3.1. Performative mechanisms in two dimensions 221 3.2. Path dependency of institutional evolution 224 4. The cost of institutions 226 4.1. The basic setup 226 4.2. Economic transaction costs 227 4.3. Political transaction costs 229 4.4. Political transaction costs on the constitutional level and the social contract 231 5. Power and institutions 232 5.1. Institutions and endogenous agential power 232 5.2. Institutions and violence 233 5.3. Evaluating institutions 235 6. Conclusion 236 Major chapter insights 237 Notes 238 References 240 viii
10 Money and value 246 1. Introduction 246 2. Performing money 247 2.1. The institution of money 247 2.2. Money, prices, andarbitrage 250 3. The psychology of money: Anchoring the performativity of monetary institutions 253 3.1. Agential power and the value of money 253 3.2. Cognition and money emotions 254 4. Money, arbitrage, and the objectivisation of subjective value 256 4.1. Objectification of value as performative rationalisation of choice 257 4.2. Entrepreneurial rent and exchange value 261 4.3. Money as form of social capital 262 5. Conclusion 264 Major chapter insights 264 Notes 265 References 267 11 Markets evolving 1. Introduction 2. Characteristics of markets: A reprise 2.1. Elements of markets 2.2. A simple map of a market 3. The evolutionary market process: Competition, endogenous niche formation, and growth 4. Money, prices, and market states 4.1. Entrepreneurship and pricing under the shadow of the specialisation dilemma 280 4.2. Beyond equilibrium: Prices, market clearing, and market states 282 5. Entrepreneurs and firms as market makers 6. Markets and institutions 7. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References Contents 272 272 273 273 275 277 280 284 288 290 290 291 293 PART IV 12 Money and finance 1. Introduction 2. Private and sovereign money 301 301 302 ix
2.1. Private money as assetified debt 302 2.2. Sovereign money as public unit of account 305 2.3. Linkages between primary and secondary monetary communities 306 3. Money and capital 308 3.1. Saving and investment relating to typesof agents 308 3.2. Deconstructing the capital market 312 3.3. Valuing capital 316 4. Assetification and liability 319 5. Conclusion 321 Major chapter insights 322 Notes 323 References 325 Contents x 13 Economic fluctuations and aggregateeconomic evolution 1. Introduction 2. Schumpeterian dynamics and techno-institutional regimes 3. Economic fluctuations of monetary aggregates: Macroeconomics and accounting balances 4. Expectations as drivers of economic fluctuations 4.1. Individual expectations 4.2. Collective dynamics 5. Patterns of economic fluctuations 5.1. Entrepreneurship and technological change 5.2. Finance and financial crises 6. Fluctuations and economic policy 6.1. Performative measurement and modelling 6.2. Monetary policy 6.3. Fiscal policy andreform 7. Economic fluctuations as shifts in market states 8. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 330 330 331 14 The economics of global markets 1. Introduction 2. Transactions and the spatial structure of global markets 2.1. Deconstructing global transactions 2.2. Spatial structure, borders, and costs of global economic transactions 2.3. The exchange rate and arbitrage 3. Market access rights and institutions governing global transactions 3.1. MARs and two-level exchange 3.2. MARs and currency areas 361 361 362 362 335 336 337 338 340 340 341 344 344 345 347 349 353 354 354 356
364 367 369 370 373
The evolution of the global division of labour 4.1. Evolving comparative advantage, capacities to trade, and locational externalities 4.2. Multinational enterprises and the structure of international production 4.3. National payment balances and their evolution over time 5. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 4. 15 Markets and inequality 1. Introduction 2. Concepts and measurement of inequality 3. Structural inequality and multilevel market selection 3.1. Country-level inequality regimes and formal institutions 3.2. Firms and interfirm competition 4. Interpersonal inequality: Individual differences, networks, and social mobility 4.1. Individual differences, nature versus nurture, and path dependency 4.2. Human capital: Educational stratification and labour markets 4.3. Social capital: Interaction in social networks and divergence 4.4. Entrepreneurship and risk-taking 5. Legitimacy and performativity of regimes of inequality 6. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 16 Global economic growth in the Earth system 1. Introduction 2. The evolution of the human economy 3. Economic growth and the technosphere 4. Energy and limits to growth 5. Markets as drivers of growth 6. Anthropocentric versus geocentric conceptions of growth 6.1. The anthropocentric perspective 6.2. The geocentric perspective 7. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 375 Contents 375 378 380 383 383 384 387 393 393 394 396 396 398 403 403 405 406 409 410 412 413 414 416 421 421 422 426 428 432 435 435 438 439 440 442 444 xi
Contents PARTY 17 Economie policy 1. Introduction 2. Economie policy and political competition: An evolutionary approach 454 2.1. Economic policy and the state 2.2. Political competition as an evolutionary process 3. Realms of political competition 3.1. Competition for public opinion 3.2. Competition for voteswithin jurisdictions 3.3. Competition for (bottom-up) influence on political decision makers 3.4. Interjurisdictional competition 3.5. Occupation of political elite positions and political decision making 3.6. Policy implementation and the bureaucracy 4. Deliberation, values, and economic policy 4.1. Inclusive deliberation as a procedural criterion 4.2. Freedom and human dignity as substantive criteria 4.3. The deliberative policy process in interjurisdictional competition 5. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References xii 453 453 454 456 459 459 460 461 464 465 467 468 468 469 471 472 473 474 476 18 Epilogue: The economist as adviser Notes References 482 489 490 Index 492
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adam_txt |
CONTENTS Introduction 1 PARTI 1 What are markets? 1. Introduction 2. Marketplaces 2.1. Marketplaces embody markets 2.2. Markets and market society 2.3. Markets, land, and labour 3. Market system 3.1. Market infrastructure and arbitrage 3.2. Markets and institutions 4. Markets: For good or bad? 5. Market economy versus capitalism 6. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 2 Economies as the science of markets 1. Introduction 2. What is science? The first-, second-, and third-person view 3. Economies, the economy, and markets 3.1. The economy as an object of science 3.2. Performativity and materiality of markets 4. Economic models as mechanistic explanations 5. Economic models triangulate cross-disciplinary data and hypotheses 6. Economics is entangled with its object:Reflexivity 7. Conclusion 9 9 10 10 11 13 14 14 15 17 18 20 21 21 23 26 26 27 29 29 31 33 37 38 40 v
Major chapter insights Notes References Contents 3 Economics and values 1. Introduction 2. Freedom, values, and markets 2.1. Freedom of choosing preferences 2.2. Freedom and social interdependence 2.3. Freedom and rationality 2.4. Freedom and social justice 3. Efficiency 3.1. Efficiency as progress 3.2. Trade-offs: Efficiency versus values 4. Markets, economists, and values 5. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 41 42 43 48 48 49 49 50 51 53 54 54 55 58 59 59 60 61 PART II 4 Evolution, ecology, economy 1. Introduction 2. Physical principles of evolution 2.1. Economic niche, environment, Earth system 2.2. Thermodynamic principles of evolution 2.3. Metabolism and growth 3. Fundamentals of evolution 3.1. Selection, fitness, adaptation 3.2. The VSR mechanism and levels of selection 4. The evolutionary economy of living systems 4.1. Evolving synergy in ecosystems and the human economy 4.2. Cultural evolution, institutions, and human ultra-sociality 5. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 5 vi Specialisation and cooperation 1. Introduction 2. Specialisation and exchange: Gains and limitations 2.1. Comparative advantage 2.2. The specialisation dilemma 67 67 68 68 70 74 77 77 80 82 82 84 88 89 89 92 99 99 100 100 102
3. Strategie interaction and power 3.1. The archetypes 3.2. Power and forced specialization 4. Externalities and the efficiency of specialisation 5. Conclusion Maj or chapter insights Notes References 6 Production and technological evolution 1. Introduction 2. Production in the technosphere 2.1. The technosphere 2.2. Production and consumption in the ecological dimension 3. Specialisation and technology 3.1. Engineering versus economic approaches to production 3.2. Production and use of technology 3.3. Technological evolution 4. Firms, technology, and specialisation 4.1. The firm as organisational form of specialisation 4.2. Technology and power in firms 5. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 104Contents 104 108 111 115 116 117 119 123 123 124 124 126 129 129 132 135 138 13 8 140 142 143 143 146 PART III 7 The economic agent 1. Introduction 2. Reframing rationality in economics 3. Brain, reason, and human sociality 3.1. The nature of the brain: Predictive and social 3.2. Reason and rationality 3.3. Emotions 4. The economic agent 4.1. Agency and agential power 4.2 Identity 4.3. Performativity 5. Mechanisms of choice and valuation 5.1. Imitation and learning 5.2. Wanting, liking, and happiness 5.3. Creativity and entrepreneurial action 6. Conclusion 153 153 154 155 155 15 8 160 161 161 163 165 166 166 168 169 171 vii
Contents 172 173 177 Major chapter insights Notes References 8 Networks and social interaction 1, Introduction 2. A short primer of network analysis 2.1. Fundamental types of network configurations in the context of markets 2.2. Dimensions of networks 3. Network structure and dynamics 3.1. Network structure and agential power 3.2. Social capital 3.3. Boundaries in networks: In-group/out-group 3.4. Network dynamics and frequency-dependent mechanisms 4. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 185 185 186 186 190 194 194 197 201 203 207 208 209 211 9 Institutions 216 1. Introduction 216 2. Following an institution 217 2.1. Cognitive mechanisms of institutionalisation 217 2.2. Institutions and emotions 220 3. Performing institutions 221 3.1. Performative mechanisms in two dimensions 221 3.2. Path dependency of institutional evolution 224 4. The cost of institutions 226 4.1. The basic setup 226 4.2. Economic transaction costs 227 4.3. Political transaction costs 229 4.4. Political transaction costs on the constitutional level and the social contract 231 5. Power and institutions 232 5.1. Institutions and endogenous agential power 232 5.2. Institutions and violence 233 5.3. Evaluating institutions 235 6. Conclusion 236 Major chapter insights 237 Notes 238 References 240 viii
10 Money and value 246 1. Introduction 246 2. Performing money 247 2.1. The institution of money 247 2.2. Money, prices, andarbitrage 250 3. The psychology of money: Anchoring the performativity of monetary institutions 253 3.1. Agential power and the value of money 253 3.2. Cognition and money emotions 254 4. Money, arbitrage, and the objectivisation of subjective value 256 4.1. Objectification of value as performative rationalisation of choice 257 4.2. Entrepreneurial rent and exchange value 261 4.3. Money as form of social capital 262 5. Conclusion 264 Major chapter insights 264 Notes 265 References 267 11 Markets evolving 1. Introduction 2. Characteristics of markets: A reprise 2.1. Elements of markets 2.2. A simple map of a market 3. The evolutionary market process: Competition, endogenous niche formation, and growth 4. Money, prices, and market states 4.1. Entrepreneurship and pricing under the shadow of the specialisation dilemma 280 4.2. Beyond equilibrium: Prices, market clearing, and market states 282 5. Entrepreneurs and firms as market makers 6. Markets and institutions 7. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References Contents 272 272 273 273 275 277 280 284 288 290 290 291 293 PART IV 12 Money and finance 1. Introduction 2. Private and sovereign money 301 301 302 ix
2.1. Private money as assetified debt 302 2.2. Sovereign money as public unit of account 305 2.3. Linkages between primary and secondary monetary communities 306 3. Money and capital 308 3.1. Saving and investment relating to typesof agents 308 3.2. Deconstructing the capital market 312 3.3. Valuing capital 316 4. Assetification and liability 319 5. Conclusion 321 Major chapter insights 322 Notes 323 References 325 Contents x 13 Economic fluctuations and aggregateeconomic evolution 1. Introduction 2. Schumpeterian dynamics and techno-institutional regimes 3. Economic fluctuations of monetary aggregates: Macroeconomics and accounting balances 4. Expectations as drivers of economic fluctuations 4.1. Individual expectations 4.2. Collective dynamics 5. Patterns of economic fluctuations 5.1. Entrepreneurship and technological change 5.2. Finance and financial crises 6. Fluctuations and economic policy 6.1. Performative measurement and modelling 6.2. Monetary policy 6.3. Fiscal policy andreform 7. Economic fluctuations as shifts in market states 8. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 330 330 331 14 The economics of global markets 1. Introduction 2. Transactions and the spatial structure of global markets 2.1. Deconstructing global transactions 2.2. Spatial structure, borders, and costs of global economic transactions 2.3. The exchange rate and arbitrage 3. Market access rights and institutions governing global transactions 3.1. MARs and two-level exchange 3.2. MARs and currency areas 361 361 362 362 335 336 337 338 340 340 341 344 344 345 347 349 353 354 354 356
364 367 369 370 373
The evolution of the global division of labour 4.1. Evolving comparative advantage, capacities to trade, and locational externalities 4.2. Multinational enterprises and the structure of international production 4.3. National payment balances and their evolution over time 5. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 4. 15 Markets and inequality 1. Introduction 2. Concepts and measurement of inequality 3. Structural inequality and multilevel market selection 3.1. Country-level inequality regimes and formal institutions 3.2. Firms and interfirm competition 4. Interpersonal inequality: Individual differences, networks, and social mobility 4.1. Individual differences, nature versus nurture, and path dependency 4.2. Human capital: Educational stratification and labour markets 4.3. Social capital: Interaction in social networks and divergence 4.4. Entrepreneurship and risk-taking 5. Legitimacy and performativity of regimes of inequality 6. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 16 Global economic growth in the Earth system 1. Introduction 2. The evolution of the human economy 3. Economic growth and the technosphere 4. Energy and limits to growth 5. Markets as drivers of growth 6. Anthropocentric versus geocentric conceptions of growth 6.1. The anthropocentric perspective 6.2. The geocentric perspective 7. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References 375 Contents 375 378 380 383 383 384 387 393 393 394 396 396 398 403 403 405 406 409 410 412 413 414 416 421 421 422 426 428 432 435 435 438 439 440 442 444 xi
Contents PARTY 17 Economie policy 1. Introduction 2. Economie policy and political competition: An evolutionary approach 454 2.1. Economic policy and the state 2.2. Political competition as an evolutionary process 3. Realms of political competition 3.1. Competition for public opinion 3.2. Competition for voteswithin jurisdictions 3.3. Competition for (bottom-up) influence on political decision makers 3.4. Interjurisdictional competition 3.5. Occupation of political elite positions and political decision making 3.6. Policy implementation and the bureaucracy 4. Deliberation, values, and economic policy 4.1. Inclusive deliberation as a procedural criterion 4.2. Freedom and human dignity as substantive criteria 4.3. The deliberative policy process in interjurisdictional competition 5. Conclusion Major chapter insights Notes References xii 453 453 454 456 459 459 460 461 464 465 467 468 468 469 471 472 473 474 476 18 Epilogue: The economist as adviser Notes References 482 489 490 Index 492 |
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publisher | Routledge |
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spelling | Herrmann-Pillath, Carsten 1959- Verfasser (DE-588)120965275 aut A new principles of economics the science of markets Carsten Herrmann-Pillath and Christian Hederer First published London ; New York Routledge 2023 xii, 505 Seiten Illustrationen txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Wirtschaftstheorie (DE-588)4079351-5 gnd rswk-swf Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 gnd rswk-swf Markt (DE-588)4037621-7 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4123623-3 Lehrbuch gnd-content Wirtschaftstheorie (DE-588)4079351-5 s Markt (DE-588)4037621-7 s Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 s b DE-604 Hederer, Christian Verfasser (DE-588)1286592402 aut 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=034068461&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Herrmann-Pillath, Carsten 1959- Hederer, Christian A new principles of economics the science of markets Wirtschaftstheorie (DE-588)4079351-5 gnd Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 gnd Markt (DE-588)4037621-7 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4079351-5 (DE-588)4059787-8 (DE-588)4037621-7 (DE-588)4123623-3 |
title | A new principles of economics the science of markets |
title_auth | A new principles of economics the science of markets |
title_exact_search | A new principles of economics the science of markets |
title_exact_search_txtP | A new principles of economics the science of markets |
title_full | A new principles of economics the science of markets Carsten Herrmann-Pillath and Christian Hederer |
title_fullStr | A new principles of economics the science of markets Carsten Herrmann-Pillath and Christian Hederer |
title_full_unstemmed | A new principles of economics the science of markets Carsten Herrmann-Pillath and Christian Hederer |
title_short | A new principles of economics |
title_sort | a new principles of economics the science of markets |
title_sub | the science of markets |
topic | Wirtschaftstheorie (DE-588)4079351-5 gnd Theorie (DE-588)4059787-8 gnd Markt (DE-588)4037621-7 gnd |
topic_facet | Wirtschaftstheorie Theorie Markt Lehrbuch |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034068461&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT herrmannpillathcarsten anewprinciplesofeconomicsthescienceofmarkets AT hedererchristian anewprinciplesofeconomicsthescienceofmarkets |