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David Mourey

  • : Démocratie Economie et Société
  • : David MOUREY Professeur d'Economie Auteurs de nombreux ouvrages d'économie chez De Boeck Fondateur des « Rencontres économiques » depuis 2005.« Rencontres économiques lycéennes » et « Rencontres économiques citoyennes »à Pontault-Combault depuis 2005 ! Fondateur des« Rencontres économiques » à Paris depuis 2008 !
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12 mars 2009 4 12 /03 /mars /2009 20:54

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Professor Sen has an article on Capitalism beyond the Crisis in the current New York Review of Books. He has a shorter summary in the Financial Times today.

Adam Smith's market never stood alone By Amartya Sen, Published: March 10 2009

 

Blog Aid Watch, Just Asking that Aid Benefit the Poor


Amartya Sen on Moralism, Maoism, and Capitalism


I share the universal respect for Professor Sen, but must respectfully disagree on some of his take on capitalism in crisis:

He points out that even Mr. Free Market Invisible Hand, Adam Smith, was aware that you need more than self-interest to make capitalism work. You also need moral values like trust, honesty, and prudence (none of which has been too obvious in the financial sector lately), so business people can do transactions without cheating each other. His story is that free market proponents forgot all that in the run-up to the current crisis. If this is true, free market proponents are amazingly lazy, not bothering to read the zillion articles by economists on precisely these values in the last 15 years. The interesting question is where do these values come from? As this recent research shows, they COULD still arise even in a world of pure self-interest, since self-interested individuals could rationally find ways to bind themselves to norms of good behavior so that they can do repeated transactions with each other (probably helped along by pre-existing norms based on culture or human evolution -- see previous post on values). A norm of trust can sustain a free market driven by the profit motive (usually supplemented by formal institutions). And why do the values sometimes break down? Unfortunately, a norm of distrust is also another possible equilibrium, in which you expect everyone else to be untrustworthy and so you are untrustworthy too. A bunch of cheaters could catch everyone by surprise, destroy trust, and we jump to the bad equilibrium. I don't know if this has anything to do with the current crisis, but I suspect this type of analysis, as practiced by tons of recent research on values and norms, is more useful than moral sermonizing to those (probably nonexistent) economists who didn't know you need trust as well as the profit motive...

 

Blog  Aid Watch

http://blogs.nyu.edu/fas/dri/aidwatch/2009/03/amartya_sen_on_moralism_maoism.html

 

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