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Paul Dragos Aligica and Peter J. Boettke
Paul Dragos Aligica and Peter J. Boettke
The search for alternatives to capitalism and the problem of comparative assessment of the performance of socialist and capitalist systems have inspired one of the richest and most remarkable episodes in the history of economic thought. By the mid 20th century an entire field had emerged, conceptualizing, theorizing, monitoring, and analyzing the largest and most consequential social and economic natural experiment in human history: Real-life Socialism. This research review focuses on the fundamental literature associated with the comparative study of socialist and capitalist systems. It features both a well-rounded inquiry of the modern history of economic thought, as well as a vibrant and critical disentanglement of the role of the economic system from the role of environment and policy decisions, as determinants of economic performance. This review will be an interesting and invaluable research resource for academics and students alike.
Paul Dragos Aligica and Peter J. Boettke
Annotated bibliography of Colander's methodological work
Essays on the Art and Craft of Economics
David C. Colander and Huei-Chun Su
Applied policy, welfare economics, and Mill’s half-truths
Essays on the Art and Craft of Economics
David Colander
Beyond DSGE Models: Toward an Empirically Based Macroeconomics
Essays on the Art and Craft of Economics
David Colander, Peter Howitt, Alan Kirman, Axel Leijonhufvud and Perry Mehrling
Complexity Economics and Workaday Economic Policy
Essays on the Art and Craft of Economics
David Colander
Much of what filters down to standard economists about complexity economics are summaries of abstract analysis that are generally seen as having little direct impact on the workaday policy analysis that most economists do. This chapter argues that complexity theory has significant implications for workaday economic policy. Even if economists do not accept that the complexity scientific theory of the economy is ready for prime time, the complexity vision, which pictures an economy as a complex evolving system undergoing continual evolutionary change, has direct relevance for their workaday applied policy.