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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:19:04 2006 |
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Just to bring the tangent on Canadian/U.S. differences back on line with
the discussion Mary Schweitzer initiated, perhaps one can ask if there are
significant difference in the way Canadian economists view government
activity.
To make this more concrete, consider Harold Innis' relationship with the
early Chicago School economists. Perhaps other on the list can say more
about this, but my perception is that Innis had a strong ambivalence
(sp.?) about government action. One the one hand, he was influenced by
the views of Frank Knight, who believed that all government action
involved the use of force and was coercive (Knight's most powerful
statement of this comes in his unpublished reflection on the
Sacco/Vincetti execution, called "The ethics of the state"). Knight
visited Toronto in 1934 at Innis' invitation and delivered a lecture on
the downfall of western civilization (published by UofT Quarterly as
"Social Science and the Political Trend") which re-iterated this theme.
But Innis was also a nationalist, and his work is often cited by those who
wish for greater government involvement in the economy in order to
establish an independent course of development. Innis also participated in the formation
of
government funding agencies for research in the social sciences (and
regularly sat on committees that handed out funds).
Perhaps discussion of how specific economists used notions of coercion in
their work would assist this discussion.
Ross
Ross B. Emmett, Augustana University College, Camrose, Alberta
CANADA T4V 2R3 voice: (403) 679-1517 fax: (403) 679-1129
e-mail: [log in to unmask] or [log in to unmask]
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