Title: A three dimensional approach to economics
1Chapter 2
- A three dimensional approach to economics
2Economics from Political Economy
- 150 years ago, economics was part of a subject
called political economypolitics, economics,
psychology, and the other social science
disciplines - Economics was narrowed to focus on markets
- Nowadays, slowly returning to broader themes
3Kind of questions that were asked by PE
- Where does value come from? (for eg. why does a
coat cost so much more than a shirt? - What are the ways in which society should
organize the relationship between people and what
should be the relationship between the state and
firms? - What motivates people and how is this distinct in
different economic systems?
4Fundamental Insight of Political Economy
- The Economy is about relationships between people
and other people (social relationships) that
organize human labor in labor processes. - Not about relationship between people and things
(as sometimes thought) - Example Agriculture
5Ways of doing agriculture
Capitalism is an economic system wherein goods
and services are produced by people at the
direction of their employers (who own the capital
good) with the purpose of making profits
6How can we think of/analyze any given system
- Competition economic relationships in which
market exchanges play the most important part - Command those aspects of economic relationships
that involve power, coercion, hierarchy,
subordination, or authority - Change the ways in which, over time, the
operation of an economic system will change the
system itself - Most of conventional economics focuses on
competition only (i.e. market exchange) - Chapter 8 and 9 will address that, but chapters
9-12 also consider the reasons for command and
change.
7Competition..Products,Labor, Capital
Voluntary exchange by relatively equal parties
8Command
- A has power over B if by imposing costs on B, A
can cause B to act in a way that is to As
advantage . - Q Why do we need command?
9Change
Question Why does the capitalist system Support
so much innovation and change? Ans Rearranging
Technology and Production Processes can Yield
Large changes in Profits.
10Central building blocks of conventional analysis
(neoclassical economics)
- Assumption of Homo Economicus Self interested,
rational maximizer of utility - Complete Contracts
- Constant or Decreasing Returns to Scale
11Homo Economicus
- Assumption is that human behavior is
fundamentally self-interested (includes with
respect to family and friends) - Human behavior is motivated by the desire for
utility or pleasure - Human behavior is rational.i.e. goal oriented
and consistent - Chapter 2 will evaluate this construct
12Contracts
- Agreement, either written or unwritten, commits
two or more parties to undertake certain actions. - Complete Contract One that fully specifies
everything that each party to the contract is to
do - Incomplete Contract One that leaves out certain
aspects of an exchange and imposes significant
enforcement costs
13Are contracts complete?
- Sometimes (think of buying apples at a store)
- Often are incomplete. (Consider the labor
contract). If contracts were complete No lawyers! - Often have effects on third parties (what are
called externalities) for example pollution of a
river
14When contracts are incomplete or...
15Supervision/Monitoring
16Returns to Scale
- Defn The proportional increase in output as a
result of increasing inputs - If you increase inputs by a certain proportion
and outputs increase by the same proportion, we
have constant returns to scale - If the output increases by less, decreasing
returns to scale. - If the output increases by more, increasing
returns to scale
17Example
Constant Returns to Scale
Increasing Returns to Scale
18Why is this important? Defines the nature of
competition
Constant RTS
Increasing RTS
If these are two firms, who will win?
19Values in Political Economy
- Every system requires some sort of evaluation in
terms of values. - For example Aquinas To sell something for more
than you bought it is a sin - Some common values Efficiency, Egalitarianism,
Poverty Minimization, Democracy, Fariness.
20Normative vs. Positive Economics
- Positive Economics What is
- Normative Econmics What should be
- No airtight sealing off of these two. What is is
often influenced by what should be (e.g. if one
is strongly egalitarian, one might see more
injustice)
21Basic Assessment of Social Systems
- Organize economic activities so as to provide
opportunities for all their participants to lead
flourishing lives (Amartya Sen) - Limits jobs are mind-numbing or unsafe, children
die young of easily preventable diseases,
illiteracy , lack of free speech, religion,
malnutrition, stigma, other conditions that limit
opportunities are generated - What are the correct boundaries of the state and
the market for this question? (e.g box on hunger)
22Efficiency
- Definition Inputs are used well and not wasted.
- Not the same thing as profitability
- An outcome is Pareto optimal (sometimes called
Pareto efficient) if there exists no other
outcome (using available resources and
technologies) that would make at least one person
better off without making anyone worse off.
23Fairness
- Fairness involves asking about the distribution
of the systems burdens and benefits - A fair economic system would be one in which its
burdens and benefits were distributed equitably. - Okbut elides the question what is equitably
24Questions surrounding Distribution
- What goods are to be distributed? (examples,
income, wealth, power, respect) - Between what entities are they to be distributed?
(Current human beings, Current and future humans,
all beings, a society, nations as a whole?) - What is the proper distribution? (Equal a priori,
meritocratic, need, property rights,
non-coercion?)
25Parable of the Flute (Sen)
- A flute is available. Three children make a claim
on it. - The first says, I am the poorest and have no
toys, I should get the flute - The second says I am the only one who can play
the flute well, I should get it - The third says I made the flute, I should get
it. - Who should get it?
26Democracy
- Extent to which the economic system supports or
inhibits democratic participation in the major
decisions made in the society . - Elements accountability of power, respect for
civil liberties, and equal opportunity for
political participation
27Societies may score higher in some categories
than another
- Slavery vs. Independent Production
- Communism vs. Capitalism
- Cooperative Movements vs. Capitalist hierarchies
- No one to one relationship. Requires evaluation
and argument. - REASONING AND EVALUATION ARE IMPOSSIBLE TO AVOID!