The Austrian economic school famously predicted and explained the problems of calculation in a socialist society. With their concept of spontaneous order, they challenged mainstream economists to look beyond simplified static models and consider the dynamic and evolutionary characteristics of social orders. However, many feel that Austrians took their victory too far and became ideologically devoted to laissez-faire. Austrian Theory and Economic Organization is a collection of essays on problems and possibilities in economic organization, written by economists and political scientists with an interest in the dynamic and evolutionary nature of market economies. Each chapter explores areas of potential agreement between Austrian theory, market socialist economics, and other heterodox schools of economic and political science. The collection aims to bridge cultural and political divisions between free market advocates who stress individual rights and left-leaning thinkers who stress social justice and a culture of solidarity.
İçerik tablosu
PART I: ORDER AND EFFICIENCY IN FREE MARKETS 1. Improving Spontaneous Orders; Randall Holcombe 2. The Problem of Unemployment When Markets Clear; Daniel Kuehn PART II: THE FIRM IN THE ECONOMY 3. The Corporate Planned Economy; Kevin Carson 4. The Firm and the Authority Relation; Per Bylund PART III: FREEDOM, CONTRACTS, AND THE STATE 5. Contract, Freedom, and Flourishing; Gus Di Zerega 6. On the Perceived Legitimacy of the State; Edward Stringham and Caleb J. Miles PART IV: AUSTRIAN ECONOMICS AND MARKET SOCIALISM 7. Beyond Market Socialism; Andrew Cumbers 8. A Post-Austrian Market Socialism; Guinevere Nell
Yazar hakkında
Per L. Bylund, Baylor University, USA Kevin Carson, Center for a Stateless Society, USA Andrew Cumbers, University of Glasgow, UK Gus di Zerega, Fund for the Study of Spontaneous Orders, Atlas Economic Research Foundation, USA Randall G. Holcombe, Florida State University, USA Daniel Kuehn, American University, USA Caleb J. Miles, University of Auckland, New Zealand Edward Peter Stringham, Fayetteville State University, USA