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PERSPECTIVES
ON POLITICAL ECONOMY TODAY
6 - 24 July, 1998
Course Director: Loránd
Ambrus-Lakatos (Central European University Budapest, Hungary)
Resource Persons:
Béla
Greskovits (Central European University Budapest, Hungary)
Anna Leander (Central European University Budapest, Hungary)
Róbert Gál (Research Institute in the Social Sciences [TÁRKI],
Budapest, Hungary)
John Earle (Central European University Budapest, Hungary)
Alan Hamlin (University of Southampton, Southampton, UK)
Gérard Roland (ECARE, Brussels, Belgium)
Juliet Johnson (Loyola University, Chicago, USA)
Tore Ellingsen (Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden)
Karl Wärneryd (Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden)
Course Description
It is important to acknowledge that
the emergence of economics as a social science which is separate from the
study of politics is a relatively recent development. Not that long time
ago, the subject matter of economics was studied under the rubric of political
economy, itself an offspring of political philosophy. In our days, however,
there is a resurgence of interest in a comprehensive study of economic
and political phenomena.
One set of reasons behind this renewed
awareness of the need for a political economy are issued by developments
internal to the contemporary disciplines of economics and political science.
Let us then mention some of these. First, the ruling methodology of economics
is that of the theory of rational and social choice. However, at the inauguration
of these theories they were meant to be applicable to the study of political
phenomena as well - let us only recall Arrow's Social Choice and Individual
Values. Can we save the vision of the founding fathers of formal analysis
in the social sciences in the form of a unified theory underlying both
economics and politics? Secondly, we may say that the field of public economics
is essentially concerned with underwriting normative judgments about public
policy decisions. Behind these normative judgments are elaborate considerations
concerning the possibility of aggregating the desires of the participants
of an economy, desires concerning social or public economic outcomes and
concerning the conditions under which the public could agree with certain
policy decisions. Now it has become increasingly clear that these considerations
are to a large extent political in nature. Do we need to involve political
principles into normative economic analysis as a consequence? As a final
and related motivation behind the rebirth of interest in political economy
we should mention the obvious fact that ‘real-life’ economic decision-makers
have an understandable tendency to avoid the adoption of policies which
could lead to a discontent that forces them out of their office. This jeopardy
may then prompt them to do something else than what the best normative
analysis advises them to do. T
Then we are compelled to study what effects
certain political systems have on the efficiency of public policy making;
thus we have to understand, for example, the relationship between the theory
of representative democracies and applied economic theory as well.
This course proposes then to study contemporary
political economy. We will take up many of the most important aspects of
the subject and will emphasize their theoretical basis. At the same time,
we will have recurrent and thorough examinations of the experience of transition
in Central and Eastern Europe as well, discussing such problems as structural
adjustment, monetary policy, welfare reform, political integration, and
bank privatization.
We expect that researchers and teachers
from several fields will join this course. Participants are welcome not
only from departments of economics and political science, but also
from sociology and philosophy departments. They can enjoy a truly interdisciplinary
undertaking. In addition, participation in the course will facilitate the
development of political economy curricula in the region.
From the Program
WEEK 1: Béla Greskovits:
‘Karl Polanyi and Albert Hirschman as Political Economists’ and ‘Adjustment
Mechanisms in Eastern Europe and Latin America’; Róbert Gál:
‘The Political Economy of Corruption’; Tore Ellingsen: ‘Institutionalism
in Political Economy’ and ‘The Problem of Political Integration’
WEEK 2: Loránd Ambrus-Lakatos:
‘Management, Responsibility, and Accountability’ and ‘Game Theory and Political
Economy’; Karl Wärneryd: ‘Public Choice and Political Economy’; Alan
Hamlin: ‘Economizing with Virtue’ and ‘The Incontinence of Representative
Democracy’
WEEK 3: Gérard Roland:
‘The Political Economy of Transition’; John Earle: ‘Political Support of
Economic Reform Measures’; Anna Leander: ‘The Changing Social Contract’;
Juliet Johnson: ‘The Problem of Delegating Authority’ and ‘Can There be
a Comparative Political Economy?’
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