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The "New" Political Economies
In 1651, 350 years ago, a French writer named Montchretien wrote a
book on the subject of "political economy." This expression stuck
and important multi-volume treatises on political economy appeared
during the following centuries. In 1890, Alfred Marshall entitled
his masterwork simply Principles of Economics, reflecting a trend at
Cambridge University to remove politics from economics. But this
trend was not just at Cambridge. During the 1920s the German society
known as the Verein fur Sozialpolitik heard from such economists as
Max Weber and Ludwig von Mises who argued for "value-free" social
sciences. the American Journal of Economics and Sociology is now
planning an entire gala issue on the connections between politics,
political science, government and economic theory. You are invited to participate.
It is clear that, throughout the centuries, economists have understood
the influence that institutions, customs, and varying legal rules have
on incentives and the role they play in giving shape to different market
outcomes. Indeed, economists giving "policy advice" have served as advisers
to statesmen, legislators, and dictators. This is still a common practice.
Professional economists claim a privileged status for their craft. But do
they really stand outside the legislative process with a talent for seeing
things "objectively"?
After World War II, the governments of the developed nations were
assigned the difficult task of "stabilizing" the business economy. In
recent years, economists have come to appreciate that macro-policymaking, whether in J. M.
Keynes' time or our own time, is mostly a "sequence of decisions" made over time. Private
citizens often understand more than
they are told. The decisions that governments undertake to follow may be "consistent" or
"inconsistent" and the broader public form decisions
based on one set of expectations or another. The difference this makes to macroeconomic
policy and performance is now a burgeoning area of research
which also links economists to political scientists in some important
ways (see Allen Drazen 2000, Political Economy in Macroeconomy, Princeton University
Press).
Some social scientists have provided deep insights into ordinary
political methods and institutions by modeling collective action as the
outcome of rational choice. The Public Choice school has developed tools
and conceptual distinctions that allow its practitioners to propose modifications for the
rules and devices within which modern democratic
orders operate and function. In a recent work, Mancur Olson applies the
insights of the Public Choice approach to both communist and capitalist
dictatorships with obvious implications for the future of East-West
political relations (see M. Olson 2000, Power and Prosperity,. Basic Books).
But does all this about the "new" political economy really add up to
anything new or has it been Montchretien's "political economy" all
the time in various disguises?
The Winter 2001 - 2002 issue of The American Journal of Economics and
Sociology will offer a selection of papers on the "New" Political Economies
from a variety of perspectives on the connection(s) between economics and
politics. For those wishing to participate--and all faculties are
invited--please send your proposals in the form of 200-250 world abstract to
the editor by April 15, 2001. The target date for delivering the papers is
July 15, 2001. Please contact the editor: Professor Laurence S. Moss /
Babson College/ Babson Park, 02457 USA. 617 728 4949 or [log in to unmask] for
additional information.
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