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E-raamat: Economics without Preferences: Microeconomics and Policymaking Beyond the Maximizing Individual

(Royal Holloway, University of London)
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"A new microeconomics when agents lack the preferences that economics normally relies on. Parts of economic orthodoxy go out the window: prices can be volatile, cost-benefit analysis no longer supplies easy answers. This book offers policy alternatives that deliver the productivity growth that capitalism can potentially provide"--

Economics without Preferences lays out a new microeconomics – a theory of choice behavior, markets, and welfare – when agents lack the preferences and marginal judgments that economics normally relies on. Agents without preferences defy the rules of the traditional model of rational choice but they can still systematically pursue their interests. The theory that results resolves several puzzles in economics. Status quo bias and other anomalies of behavioral economics shield agents from harm; they are expressions rather than violations of rationality. Parts of economic orthodoxy go out the window. Agents will fail to make the fine-grained trade-offs between options ingrained in conventional economics, leading market prices to be volatile and cost-benefit analysis to break down. This book provides policy alternatives to fill this void. Governments can spur innovation, the main benefit markets can deliver, while sheltering agents from the upheavals that accompany economic change.

A new microeconomics when agents lack the preferences that economics normally relies on. Parts of economic orthodoxy go out the window: prices can be volatile, cost-benefit analysis no longer supplies easy answers. This book offers policy alternatives that deliver the productivity growth that capitalism can potentially provide.

Arvustused

'Michael Mandler is one of the most brilliant and unorthodox minds in social science and Economics without Preferences is his masterwork. Mandler's fascinating reformulation of economic theory via the relaxation of conventional notions of rationality is pathbreaking. This book demonstrates that the empirical limitations of neoclassical theory can be constructively and compellingly addressed to produce a richer and more powerful formal framework for understanding individual and collective behavior. Every economist should study this wonderful book.' Steven Durlauf, Director, Stone Center for Research on Wealth Inequality and Mobility, Harris School of Public Policy, University of Chicago 'Mandler's stimulating, thought-provoking, and enjoyable book uses the transition from good old-fashioned neoclassicism to modern economics as a springboard to his own theory of incomplete preferences. The result is an intriguing series of implications and questions for received theory. Mandler's theoretical developments culminate in proposals to evaluate government policies by their effect on the options available to individuals rather than by classical definitions of efficiency. If that framework had been in place when steel belts became rust belts, the economic and political fallout might have taken a very different and more benign course.' Duncan Foley, Emeritus Leo Model Professor of Economics, New School for Social Research

Muu info

A new microeconomics behavior, markets, and welfare analysis when agents lack the preferences that economics normally relies on.
Preface;
1. Marginal utility matters; Part I. Trade-Offs and
Rationality:
2. Utility as an ordering principle;
3. Incomplete preferences;
4. The rationality of choice;
5. Safety bias;
6. The myth of indifference;
part II. Economic Analysis and Policy Without Preferences:
7. The volatility
of prices;
8. Trouble with welfare economics;
9. Pareto without preferences;
10. Utilitarianism without utility;
11. Production and rationality;
12.
Custom and flexibility; Appendix.
Michael Mandler is a Professor of Economics at Royal Holloway College, University of London. He is an economic theorist who has taught at the University of Pennsylvania and Harvard University and is the author of Dilemmas in Economic Theory (1999).