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Institutional Economic Theory Economics 451 University of Missouri-Kansas City. Knowing–Doing–Valuing –>Behavior. Inquiry Behaving - emerge out of problematic situation Valuation What is a situation? What is knowledge – terminus of inquiry How do we acquire it?
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Institutional Economic Theory Economics 451 University of Missouri-Kansas City
Knowing–Doing–Valuing –>Behavior • Inquiry • Behaving - emerge out of problematic situation • Valuation • What is a situation? • What is knowledge – terminus of inquiry • How do we acquire it? • How many teeth in the mouth of a horse? • Clarence Darrow story. • Knowledge and Action-- inseparable • Nature of Theory and practice – properly done also inseparable • Evolutionary Process • Darwin -- Importance of ocean islands is that it reduces confusion of task to simpler proposition – assumed marooned • evidence of past connection with nearest continent • Finches on the Galapagos – had great variety of beaks – nowhere but on the islands – must have evolved there. • The Grand synthesis • Evolution by natural selection • Genetics
Veblen’s synthesis • Evolution by natural selection • Concept of Culture – anthropology • Veblen’s point of view – cumulative causation – instincts – habits
Elements of Theory • Culture • Evolution of institutions • Consumption theory • Class Analysis – Leisure class – • pecuniary emulation • canons of taste • conspicuous consumption • conspicuous waste • dress v clothing • Production theory • Resources • industrial arts – tools – machine process – combination – cumulative causation • Business – purchase and sale – profit max – money as the key variable • Nature of capital • Value Theory • Theory of Progress
Veblen --------Commons-----------Mitchell • Veblen – Theory—Critique of standard, classical and Marxian. • Commons – applied and policy • Mitchell – built on Veblen’s theory to create empirical foundation for economics, especially business cycles, theory of money • Veblen • Brief Biography • Criticisms of Classical Theory • pre-Darwinian Taxonomy • pre- conceptions of human nature - natural order
Dewey Veblen Schematic of Veblen – Dewey Theoretical Heritage Seek for security, Ceremonial arts, sacrifice, ceremonial rite, magical Business cycles, Mitchell cult, sacrifice of contrite Quantitative Data, heart (more pleasing than GNP oxen or bull) Kusnets – Ayres Industrial arts, turn powers NBER of nature to account, make friend instead of enemy. Instrumental theory of value Major Theoretical Developments Veblenian Dichotomy, Combined: Pecuniary Employments/Industrial Employments Vebl en’s distinctions And all the rest of the distinctions he made With Dewey’s value theory Evolutionary approach to theory and method Class analysis
Mitchell -- Business Cycles – Data, Quantification, NBER, • Biography on Mitchell • Born Rushville Illinois 1874 • Decatur Ill High school • University of Chicago 1892 – entered in first class of U of Chicago • Veblen introduced him to economics • Dewey – taught him Philosophy • Dissertation – role of money -- greenbacks • Continued statistics experiments Institute of U of Chicago 1900-1901 • Univ of California 1903 -- head of dept • Columbia University 1913 there for next 33 years • Kusnets, National Income and Product accounts • Types of writing • Statistical Series – business cycles • National income accounts – Kuznets • Aspects of human nature -- institutional factors mass behavior • Quantitative statistical approach to human behavior
Schematic of Commons Contributions and Heritage Commons Labor Theoretical Policy social experiments Reasonable value
Commons • Brief Biography -- Myself • Indiana – discharged for ineffectiveness and dishonesty • Syracuse – discharged due to views on business and religion. Suggested baseball on Sunday so working people could have a form of recreation on only day off • University of Wisconsin– rest of career • Definition of Institution -- collective action in control and liberation of individual action • Natural Law -- problems – monopoly – what to do about – public utility
Behavior Theory – The nature of Human Nature • A valid way of thinking about economics derives from a valid conception of human nature. • What constitutes a valid conception of human nature? • Rationality – irrationality – what constitutes these • Economic Man and the Standard Perspective • Human Nature – what everybody thinks • human nature is such that . . . . . • It is only human nature to . . . . . • You can’t change human nature . . . . • The traditional view – assumptions about human behavior • hedonism • lack of evolution • rationality – in the form of economic man – calculator of pleasure and pain • determined or shaped by motives – profit motive
The contemporary-- traditional view • Human nature, at bottom, is based on self-interest and greed. Richard Posner has stated the position in its most stark form. Suppose we were to give humans an acid bath. What would be left? Greed and self-interest is Posner’s reply. • What can we make of this • one reaction may be to dismiss it as simplistic nonsense not deserving of attention • Another possibility is understand that significant numbers of people, including many social scientists (economists especially) agree with Posner so a more complete response is called for.
Veblen on Instincts Veblen -- The Instinct of Workmanship • Where to start – no genuine inquiry can proceed, tabula rosa, without some antecedent presumption and facts. • Control theory – A use later on in consumption theory Not Tropismatic Functional Workmanship Ownership irrational Progressive Parental Bent Predation - Past -binding Instrumental Idle Curiosity Vested Interest Ceremonial Technological –
Institutional View – assumptions about human nature/behavior • humans have a natural (biological) existence • nature of the species • genetic structure etc – relationship of head and hands • human reproduction is bi-sexual – requiring two genders • human infants require physiological care for an extended period in the early stages of life (unlike fish for example and many other species) • human children, without the production of which there would be no more humans, usually are nurtured within a group of other humans (family, tribe, community etc.) for an extended period , often several years. • Assertion – hypothesis – proposition -- Most people adopt the cultural habits and behaviors of the group they associate with, especially early in life, e.g., most children adopt the religion and language of their parents, family, community. • Language contains cultural relationships – conceptualizations, -- cognitions • If all behavior is traced to self-interest, by someone saying that all behavior is self-interest, i.e., I gave money to my mother because I felt guilty, therefore it was for my own self-interest, not hers, that the money exchanged, or other e.g., ad infinitium