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Fri Mar 31 17:18:53 2006 |
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Re: definitions of economics
One has to distinguish between the subject-oriented definitions of
economics (e.g. the production and distribution of goods, etc.) and
the process-oriented definitions (rational choice under scarcity).
The problem is that these two approaches get lumped indiscriminately
together.
A more significant problem is that the definition is inevitably
sociologically-determined.
Economics as a 'discipline' was artificially constructed in the
first place, so that broad agendas are sociologically-excluded. Did
Max Weber or Karl Polanyi 'do' economics? Not as far as economists
are concerned.
Even within 'economics', some approaches are more acceptable than
others.
IN practice, economics should be defined as what 'respectable'
economists do - namely neoclassical economists (of whatever variant).
That is, economics is the study of what Hausman calls 'rational
greed', but delimited to conceptual frameworks dictated by
constrained optimisation.
So in practice, economics is not about the study of the production
and distirbution of goods, etc. It is about the study of this subject
via a particular narrowly defined analytical framework.
Whether economics ought to be so defined, and so practised is another
matter.
Evan Jones Economics Sydney University
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