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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:19:04 2006 |
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Mary
I am not aware of the commonness ot the usage of "coercion" by economic
theorists to which you refer. I suspect that the usage you justifiably
criticize appears more commonly in documents authored by conservative think
tanks than in economic journals. The former are usually quite distinct from
economic theory -- "economic polemics" might be the better term.
Phil Ruder
On Sun, 14 May 1995 [log in to unmask] wrote:
> When did "coercion" become commonly used by economists to mean
> virtually everything the government does? I note several possible
> substitute words that could be chosen: constrain, compel, oblige,
> force -- why coerce? Coerce is a very narrow, very STRONG term.
> -- Mary Schweitzer, Dept. of History, Villanova
>
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| Phil Ruder |
| Dept. of Bus. and Economics [log in to unmask] |
| Pacific University (vox) 503-357-6151 |
| Forest Grove, OR (fax) 503-359-2242 |
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