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Date: | Sun, 11 Oct 2009 10:23:07 -0400 |
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Warren Samuel's post emphasized the inevitable role of institutions
in market processes. Somewhat similarly, Mohammad Gani and Edith
Kuiper in earlier posts referred to history, customs and shared
habits as important to the fabric of society and markets embedded in
them. "Spontaneous order" may not be only an unfortunate choice
of word, as some have suggested, implying that the underlying
conception is still valid. Order is definitely not guaranteed as we
know from all the examples of traffic jams, bubbles and collapses
folks have pointed out. The spontaneity of markets, elucidated by
Steven Horwitz as "the unplanned nature of the order that emerged not
the actions that comprise the eventual emergence of that order" has
limited validity - what important conclusions do you draw from it,
except an absolute faith in the market system in spite of being
challenged by real world complexities.
Robert Heilbroner, no fan of Hayek or free market rhetoric, used to
say that (unlike other human institutions) markets possessed
"regularities". That they do. And it explains how Adam Smith and
classical economists successfully applied the analytical method in
studying markets and prices. But regularity does not translate in any
meaningful way into spontaneity, and classical economists did not
make the economy or markets autonomous, and separate from society.
Heilbroner preferred the term 'economic society' which describes the
market phenomenon accurately without attributing characteristics to
it which are misleading as far as outcomes are concerned. I find it
puzzling that Hayek's economics, rich in institutional analyses,
would elevate the unplanned nature of the market above all.
Sumitra Shah
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