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Prof. Fred Carstensen from the University of Connecticut
kindly sent me off-list three articles to be published in
Romanian economic journals. They are a programmatic
exposition of US ideals as applied in real-life institutions.
In describing 'capitalism' he makes a very good description
of the Free Enterprise system, based on well-defined property
rights, and explores the role of the State to create, protect and
sometimes substitute markets. He argues that the Anglo-Saxon
common law tradition is a central piece of such arrangements.
But I argue that is not the point; historical 'capitalism'
was in fact a Capital-needing Free Enterprise system, and
currently the best approximation is maybe fast-growing China.
The current western system I call 'market economy' is a
Markets-needing, mostly Free Enterprise system.
The differences between the two have been partly summarized
by Alvin Toffler (Second to Third waves), and are reflected
culturally by the transition from Modernism to Postmodernism.
For symmetry, real socialism was a Capital-needing State
Administration system.
The transition from Capital-needing to Markets-needing is
what I want to explore; I feel that most current textbook economics
is the product of another era and not sufficiently descriptive of
current realities. Notably the emphasis on comparative statics.
I've not yet seen a satisfactory, *quantitative* model of modern
marketing strategy based on product quality, incorporating the
product life cycle; entry and exit not just from a market, but from
public consciousness; technological progress and obsolescence.
There are nice theories in marketing, but purely word-based;
skill in literary criticism seems more valued in this field than
numerical analysis. There may be empirical models in large
businesses, but probably top secret to keep the $$$ inside.
Noteworthy is that pure competition is still presented as an
ideal, while real firms strive to avoid it - in jargon, to "proactively
leverage their core competencies to build sustained competitive
advantage" - that is, to create and then exploit oligopoly rents.
There is a weird sort of popular literature appearing now in
Romania, mostly translated from French, which opposes free
markets as American imperialist tools and accuse 'mondialization'
to be a way of exploiting peoples and their nature. They denounce
the IMF, World Bank, and see everywhere Big Business conspiracies.
I'm not too clear what they propose instead: some sort of
autarchic new socialism? or a community-based self-administration?
Also I'm not clear what forces around the globe support such
views; traditionally it has been the Soviet Union, but now?
When did such views arise?
Thanks for thinking on this,
Mircea
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