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Mainstream economics was founded on many strong assumptions. Institutions and politics were treated as irrelevant, government as exogenous, social norms as epiphenomena. As an initial gambit this was fine. But as the horizons of economic inquiry have broadened, these assumptions have become hindrances rather than aids. If we want to understand why some economies succeed and some fail, why some governments are effective and others not, why some communities prosper
while others stagnate, it is essential to view economics as embedded in politics and society. Prelude to Political Economy is a study of this embeddedness; it argues for an 'inclusive' approach to
institutions and the state. Modern economics recognizes that individuals' pursuit of their own selfish ends can result in socially suboptimal outcomes - the Prisoner's Dilemma being the stark example. It has been suggested that what we need in such an eventuality is 'third-party' intervention, which can take the form of imposing punishment on players. Kaushik Basu objects to this method of wishing third parties out of thin air. He argues that if a third party that could
impose its will on others were available, then it should have been modeled as a player to start with. The adoption of such an inclusive approach has implications for our
conception of the state and the law. It means that the law cannot be construed as a factor that changes the game that citizens play. It is instead simply a set of beliefs of citizens; and, as such, it is similar to social norms. What the law does for an economy, so can social norms. The book discusses how the nature of policy advice and our conception of state power are affected by this altered view of the state and the law. As corollaries, the book addresses a variety
of important social and philosophical questions, such as whether the state should guarantee freedom of speech, whether determinism is compatible with free will, and whether the free market can lead to
coercion.
Mainstream economics was founded on many strong assumptions. Institutions and politics were treated as irrelevant, government as exogenous, social norms as epiphenomena. As an initial gambit this was fine. But as the horizons of economic inquiry have broadened, these assumptions have become hindrances rather than aids. If we want to understand why some economies succeed and some fail, why some governments are effective and others not, why some communities prosper
while others stagnate, it is essential to view economics as embedded in politics and society. Prelude to Political Economy is a study of this embeddedness; it argues for an 'inclusive' approach to
institutions and the state. Modern economics recognizes that individuals' pursuit of their own selfish ends can result in socially suboptimal outcomes - the Prisoner's Dilemma being the stark example. It has been suggested that what we need in such an eventuality is 'third-party' intervention, which can take the form of imposing punishment on players. Kaushik Basu objects to this method of wishing third parties out of thin air. He argues that if a third party that could
impose its will on others were available, then it should have been modeled as a player to start with. The adoption of such an inclusive approach has implications for our
conception of the state and the law. It means that the law cannot be construed as a factor that changes the game that citizens play. It is instead simply a set of beliefs of citizens; and, as such, it is similar to social norms. What the law does for an economy, so can social norms. The book discusses how the nature of policy advice and our conception of state power are affected by this altered view of the state and the law. As corollaries, the book addresses a variety
of important social and philosophical questions, such as whether the state should guarantee freedom of speech, whether determinism is compatible with free will, and whether the free market can lead to
coercion.
Part I. Preliminaries
1: Introduction
2: Games and Misdemeanors: Game Theory for the Uninitiated
3: Individual Rationality
Part II. Society
4
Part III. The State
5: Law and Economics
6: Power and Coercion
7: On Advising Government
8: The Concept of State
Part IV. Ethics and Judgment
9: Interpersonal Comparisons
10: Consequentialism and Rights
Part V. Conclusion
11: Some Concluding Remarks
Appendix. Notes on Methodology: Various and Sundry
Professor of Economics and holds the C. Marks Chair at the
Department of Economics, Cornell University. He has previously been
Distinguished Visitor, London School of Economics (1993), Visiting
Professor at the Department of Economics, Princeton University
(1989-91), Member, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton
(1985-86) and Professor, Delhi School of Economics (1985-94). He is
a Fellow of the Econometric Society and a recipient of the
Mahalanobis Memorial
Award for contributions to economics. In 1981-2 he was CORE fellow
at CORE, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium. He has published extensively in
the areas of development economics, game theory, social choice
and
welfare and industrial organization theory.
http://www.people.cornell.edu/pages/kb40/
`In sum we have a curious book. The intelligence and clarity of the
author can never be faulted. Ideas are at the forefront, not
technique. The book is often highly original, but the first half is
strictly derivative. Nonetheless there are nw ideas of value, most
of all about the state. I would have been happier had the author
started at the truly new, focused on that, developed it, and thrown
out the rest. That disappointment, however, is outweighed by
the
rare pleasure of receiving something conceptual and substantive,
rather than receiving nothing.'
Tyler Cowen, Economics and Philosophy, 2002
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