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61. The Economic Institutions of Capitalism by Oliver E. Williamson | |
Paperback: 468
Pages
(1998-10-01)
list price: US$28.95 -- used & new: US$14.48 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 068486374X Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (4)
Why hadn't I heard more about this sooner?
Very useful for corporate lawyers
A classic of new institutional economics Williamson's core idea is the theory of transaction cost economics. We can analogize transaction costs to friction: they are dead weight losses that reduce efficiency. They make transactions more costly and less likely to occur. Among the most important sources of transaction costs is the limited cognitive power of human decisionmakers. Unlike the Chicago School of law and economics, which posits the traditional concept of rational choice, Williamson asserts that rationality is bounded. Put another way, he assumes that economic actors seek to maximize their expected utility, but also that the limitations of human cognition often result in decisions that fail to maximize utility.Decisionmakers inherently have limited memories, computational skills, and other mental tools, which in turn limit their ability to gather and process information. As he demonstrates, this phenomenon, known as bounded rationality,has pervasive implications for understanding how institutions work. At the policy level, transaction cost analysis is highly relevant to setting legal rules. Suppose a steam locomotive drives by a field of wheat. Sparks from the engine set crops on fire. Should the railroad company be liable? In a world of zero transaction costs, the initial assignment of rights is irrelevant. If the legal rule we choose is inefficient, the parties can bargain around it. In a world of transaction costs, however, the parties may not be able to bargain. This is likely to be true in our example. The railroad travels past the property of many landowners, who put their property to differing uses and put differing values on those uses. Negotiating an optimal solution will all of those owners would be, at best, time consuming and onerous. Hence, choosing the right rule-which is typically the rule the parties would have chosen if they were able to bargain (the so-called hypothetical bargain)-becomes quite important. In sum, highly recommended. If so, you might ask, of course, why did I subtract one star? Mainly because of Williamson's unfortunate writing style. Although EIoC is largely free of the recreational mathematics that plagues modern economic writing, which is useful for those of us who flunked Differential Equations, it is very jargon-intensive. Worse yet, much of the jargon is self-created. All of which makes reading Williamson an effort-intensive project. Usually the cost-benefit analysis nevertheless comes out in his favor, but sometimes one puzzles out the jargon to find a rather obvious point that could have been conveyed far more simply. (The business about contracting nodes, pp. 32ff, is a classic example.)
Great for expanded understanding of vertical integration |
62. Antitrust Economics by Roger D. Blair, David L. Kaserman | |
Hardcover: 496
Pages
(2008-03-04)
list price: US$79.95 -- used & new: US$49.99 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0195135350 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
63. China's Unfinished Economic Revolution by Nicholas R. Lardy | |
Hardcover: 304
Pages
(1998-09)
list price: US$49.95 -- used & new: US$37.00 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0815751346 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (3)
needs an update
A well researched publication, athough biased in argument.
Timely, critical but not theoretical enough |
64. The Analysis of Linear Economic Systems: Father Maurice Potrons Pioneering Works (Routledge Studies in the History of Economics) | |
Hardcover: 288
Pages
(2010-09-20)
list price: US$140.00 -- used & new: US$140.00 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0415473217 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Maurice Potron (1872-1942), a French Jesuit mathematician, constructed and analyzed a highly original, but virtually unknown economic model. This book presents translated versions of all his economic writings, preceded by a long introduction which sketches his life and environment based on extensive archival research and family documents. Potron had no education in economics and almost no contact with the economists of his time. His primary source of inspiration was the social doctrine of the Church, which had been updated at the end of the nineteenth century. Faced with the ‘economic evils’ of his time, he reacted by utilizing his talents as a mathematician and an engineer to invent and formalize a general disaggregated model in which production, employment, prices and wages are the main unknowns. He introduced four basic principles or normative conditions (‘sufficient production’, the ‘right to rest’, ‘justice in exchange’, and the ‘right to live’) to define satisfactory regimes of production and labour on the one hand, and of prices and wages on the other. He studied the conditions for the existence of these regimes, both on the quantity side and the value side, and he explored the way to implement them. This book makes it clear that Potron was the first author to develop a full input-output model, to use the Perron-Frobenius theorem in economics, to state a duality result, and to formulate the Hawkins-Simon condition. These are all techniques which now belong to the standard toolkit of economists. This book will be of interest to Economics postgraduate students and researchers, and will be essential reading for courses dealing with the history of mathematical economics in general, and linear production theory in particular. |
65. Charting Jamaica's Economic And Social Development: A Much Needed Paradigm Shift by Dennis Chung | |
Paperback: 140
Pages
(2009-03-03)
list price: US$15.00 -- used & new: US$15.00 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 144146140X Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (1)
Accountonomics |
66. Regional Economics (Routledge Advanced Texts in Economics and Finance) by Roberta Capello | |
Paperback: 344
Pages
(2006-12-26)
list price: US$65.00 -- used & new: US$51.45 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0415395216 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description The book is a textbook in regional economics for undergraduate and graduate students. A vast amount of theories and models have been developed since the official recognition of regional economics as a distinct branch of economics. In particular, this book focuses on logical and theoretical linkages between different theories and models: both macro and microeconomic; neoclassical and Keynesian. The evolution of theoretical approaches in regional economics is dealt in the book through the evolution of the concept of space: from physical space, which characterizes location theory, to uniform space (typical of neoclassical and Keynesian approaches ) to diversified-relational space (embedded in local districts and milieu approaches, as well as in the theory of learning regions) to diversified stylised space (as exemplified by the new economic geography and dynamic neoclassical approaches). |
67. Non-Linear Dynamics and Endogenous Cycles (Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems) | |
Paperback: 204
Pages
(1998-06-19)
list price: US$84.95 -- used & new: US$68.95 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 3540643214 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
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68. The Friedman System: Economic Analysis of Time Series by William Frazer | |
Hardcover: 280
Pages
(1997-07-23)
list price: US$119.95 Isbn: 0275958434 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
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69. A New Economic View of American History: From Colonial Times to 1940 (Second Edition) by Jeremy Atack, Peter Passell | |
Paperback: 714
Pages
(1994-05-17)
-- used & new: US$35.97 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0393963152 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (6)
One of the best economic history books out there
college textbook
A great contribution
American History through an Economic Filter!
If You're Choosing Only One ... I remember it in terms of so many wonderful anecdotes. There are the farm girls from Vermont who staffed the mills in Massachusetts until the great Irish immigration drove them back to the farm. There are the restless young men from the prairies who rode the rafts down river to New Orleans, and then set off to see the world. There are the canals that lost all their capital value with the coming of the railroads - but then kept operating anyway, because it was more worthwhile to use them than to tear them up. This is not, of course, precisely a law book. But it is a book about issues for the law: about slavery, about public land policy, about the structure of industry and finance. The chapters on the Great Depression alone would make a sufficient background for any course in constitutional or administrative law.For the authors, only two words: new edition. ... Read more |
70. The Market System: What It Is, How It Works, and What to Make of It by Professor Charles E. Lindblom, Charles E. Lindblom | |
Paperback: 304
Pages
(2002-09-01)
list price: US$15.95 -- used & new: US$6.27 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0300093349 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (7)
A thoughtful, readable overview of how the market system works
Markets are Human-Created
Good, but a bit too optimistic
Rubbish "Lindblom's abuse of logic in his argument goes further. Suppose one grants him that because the value of his book in large part depends on the preferences and actions of people besides him, he is not entitled to what people choose to pay him. It hardly follows that it is up to "society" to decide the issue. Lindblom has argued in this way: The value of what someone produces depends on the actions of everyone else, that is, on "the whole system." But this is to reify "the whole system" as if it were a separate entity with rights and entitlements of its own." ""Do you mean to tell me that in your society, other than a claim to liberty to work for wages and to hold and use assets if you can get any, no one has any claim on anyone else, on government, or on society other than what one can claim by offering something in return. . . . You call yourselves human beings?" (p. 114). Clearly, the spaceman speaks for our author, who elsewhere bemoans the millions of people who would starve, were the market rule strictly applied. Would not all infants fail to reach adulthood, since they make no market contribution? "[T]he world would lie depopulated in a generation" (p. 120). I venture to suggest that Lindblom has totally misapprehended the issue. The question is not whether people without assets or marketable skills should starve; of course they should not. But does it help these unfortunates to give them enforceable rights to sustenance? A legal enactment of this kind will not conjure into existence any resources, and these can be obtained only from the productive. Why will the poor fare better if they depend on the state to seize wealth from others, rather than rely on charity? Again Lindblom falls into the fallacy of thinking that a market society contains nothing but market transactions." "Lindblom is for the most part content to repeat his arguments of fifty years ago. Perhaps in another half-century he will grasp what is wrong with them." Quote: David Gordon,...
A Calm but Caring Exploration Well, the subtitle of this book is "What It Is, How It Works, and What to Make of It." As he says early on: "For at least 150 years many societies have been trapped in an ill-tempered debate about market systems. Now we have an opportunity to think about these systems with a new dispassion and clarity. Market ideologues have learned that there is little to fear from communism... For their part, socialist ideologues have realized that aspiring for a better society is not enough. They have to face the complexities of constructing one." One way of bisecting the population is by distinguishing those who see an imperfect world and want to perfect it from those who see an imperfect world and want to live in it as well as its imperfections allow. Charles Lindblom, a professor of economics and political science, is of the first sort. His viewpoints become clear as the book goes along, and he makes no bones about the imperfections of the various market systems and their supporting political systems. At the same time he is not an ideologue, and does not fall into the trap of yearning for a utopia of the right, or of the left. Basically, he sees the market system as inducing cooperation and preempting violent interaction over a vast range of social interactions. That these take place mostly with money as intermediary does not remove them from the social sphere: it is, he claims, a false distinction to place economic interactions in some separable sphere from social interactions. The real distinction that the market system makes is quid pro quo: interactions between people involve an exchange - of goods for money, of favor for favor, of dinner at your house for (maybe much later) dinner at my house. But the invention of money and credit has made possible society-wide cooperation (the chain of cooperators to get this computer to my desk runs into the millions, or the hundreds of millions, of cooperating humans). For this the market system gets full credit. But, as we know from the history of the Industrial Revolution (still going on in speeded-up form in some parts of the world), unfettered capitalism (the unregulated market system, in our terminology) is a harsh sorter-out of its participants into a few big winners (the entrepreneurs), a large number of more-or-less-contented employees, and a large number (although, unless the society is in imminent danger of revolution, not so large as the second group) of "losers" for whom the system offers little but grinding toil and early death. Excepting such as Robert Nozick and Ayn Rand, most people feel the government has a legitimate role in curbing the excesses of the market system and protecting the citizens from each other within it. For it is a particularly transparent sophistry that all participants in the system come to it as roughly equally competent. To consider just one sort of inequality: many participants cannot do the arithmetic (don't even know that there is arithmetic they should be doing!) that would tell them whether they are getting a reasonable value when they buy something on time. Nor, say, do they understand the savage rate of compounding that credit card debt, left unattended, incurs. The great political schism of our time is not religious, but free-market vs. government intervention. It can take a vast number of forms, and debate can get bogged down in symbolically important issues of little practical consequence while other more important effects are ignored. It is the virtue of this book that it adopts a more neutral terminology ("the market system") and is able to discuss and evaluate a vast range of issues on which sides are taken without demonizing one side or the other. The weakness of this book is its inconclusiveness. It can't be helped. One can read a book about welfare reform, for example, and come away convinced of the author's prescription, because he has carefully stage-managed his argument to minimize or hide difficulties. Lindblom does not have that luxury: every issue really does have two sides. His general views are not in doubt: the market system is a very good thing; it needs government controls; government can, does, and should use the market system when it can it further the collective goals of the society. But: how much freedom, of what sort, is enough? Is a command political system that employs market incentives just about as good as democracy? What possible alternatives are there to a market system? What can be done about corporations, these vast engines of production that are increasingly out of the control of the political system? I enjoyed this book, although I'm not sure what I now know that I didn't already tacitly know. There were a few epiphanies, but they went by so quickly that I suspect I could profit much from a second reading. There are no pictures, charts, or bold-faced claims: the book has no visual aids to highlight its points. The prose is calm, and the arguments for or against a position are spare, with little or no supporting evidence. One reason for this is the high level at which the points are discussed: Lindblom is not making policy, but rather pointing out the wide range of possible answers to many of the vexed questions of the day. One cannot doubt the truth of most of what he says. The question is, what is one to do with it? If one is a person of the second type, the answer is, nothing. But reformers should be given pause: Perhaps, after reading this book they may be persuaded to make their solutions less sweeping, in keeping with a new appreciation of the subtlety and richness of the problems of organizing a society around a market system that is intertwined with a political system. ... Read more |
71. Asia's Innovation Systems in Transition (New Horizons in the Economics of Innovation.) | |
Hardcover: 322
Pages
(2006-09-30)
list price: US$140.00 -- used & new: US$115.11 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1845427130 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description The success of Asian economies (first Japan, then Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore, Hong Kong and, more recently, China and India) has made it tempting to look for ‘an Asian model of development’. However, the strength of Asian development lies less in strategies that reproduce successful national systems of innovation and more in the capacity for institutional change to open up new development trajectories with greater emphasis on knowledge and learning. The select group of contributors demonstrate that although there are important differences among Asian countries in terms of institutional set-ups supporting innovation, government policies and industrial structures, they share common transitional processes to cope with the globalizing learning economy. With strong implications for policy makers, Asia’s Innovation Systems in Transition will be of great interest to academics and postgraduate students as well as national and international policy organizations. |
72. Systems Thinking, Second Edition: Managing Chaos and Complexity: A Platform for Designing Business Architecture by Jamshid Gharajedaghi President and CEO of Interactformer director of The Busch Centerthe research arm of the Systems Sciences Departmentand Adjunct Professor of Systems Sciences at The Wharton SchoolUniversity of Pennyslvania | |
Paperback: 368
Pages
(2005-12-19)
list price: US$46.95 -- used & new: US$38.54 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0750679735 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Customer Reviews (27)
This book is bunk!
Horrible book!
An excellent practical guide for business practices...
Not up to expectations
A True Cipher Key To Business Design / Re-Engineering |
73. National Development and the World System: Educational, Economic, and Political Change, 1950-1970 by and Hannan Meyer | |
Hardcover: 344
Pages
(1979-08)
list price: US$32.50 -- used & new: US$174.23 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0226521362 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
74. Solar Power Plants: Fundamentals, Technology, Systems, Economics | |
Hardcover: 425
Pages
(1991-08-23)
list price: US$155.00 Isbn: 3540188975 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
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75. Generalized Bounds for Convex Multistage Stochastic Programs (Lecture Notes in Economics and Mathematical Systems) (v. 547) by Daniel Kuhn | |
Paperback: 190
Pages
(2004-11-23)
list price: US$89.95 -- used & new: US$71.48 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 3540225404 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description This book investigates convex multistage stochastic programs whose objective and constraint functions exhibit a generalized nonconvex dependence on the random parameters. Although the classical Jensen and Edmundson-Madansky type bounds or its extensions are generally not available for such problems, tight bounds can systematically be constructed under mild regularity conditions. A nice primal-dual symmetry property is revealed when the proposed bounding method is applied to linear stochastic programs. After having developed the theoretical concepts, exemplary real-life applications are studied. It is shown how market power, lognormal stochastic processes, and risk-aversion can be properly handled in a stochastic programming framework. Numerical experiments show that the relative gap between the bounds can be reduced to a few percent without exploding the problem size. |
76. Systems Thinkers by Magnus Ramage, Karen Shipp | |
Paperback: 316
Pages
(2009-09-17)
list price: US$89.95 -- used & new: US$58.90 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1848825242 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Systems Thinkers presents a biographical history of the field of systems thinking, by examining the life and work of thirty of its major thinkers. It discusses each thinker’s key contributions, the way this contribution was expressed in practice and the relationship between their life and ideas. This discussion is supported by an extract from the thinker’s own writing, to give a flavour of their work and to give readers a sense of which thinkers are most relevant to their own interests. Systems thinking is necessarily interdisciplinary, so that the thinkers selected come from a wide range of areas – biology, management, physiology, anthropology, chemistry, public policy, sociology and environmental studies among others. A significant aim of the book is to broaden and deepen the reader’s interest in systems writers, providing an appetising ‘taster’ for each of the 30 thinkers, so that the reader is encouraged to go on to study the published works of the thinkers themselves. Customer Reviews (1)
An Instant Education in "Second-Level Laws" and their apps.... |
77. The Korean Economic System (Asian Finance and Development) by Jae-Seung Shim, Moosung Lee | |
Hardcover: 240
Pages
(2008-11-01)
list price: US$99.95 -- used & new: US$94.77 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0754670783 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description |
78. The Economics of Innocent Fraud: Truth For Our Time by JohnKenneth Galbraith | |
Hardcover: 80
Pages
(2004-04-26)
list price: US$19.95 -- used & new: US$1.58 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0618013245 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description The dominant role of the corporation in modern society is one such form of innocent fraud, and he explains how managers hold the real power in our system, not consumers or shareholders as the image would suggest. Despite the "appearance of relevance for owners," capitalism has given way to corporate bureaucracy--"a bureaucracy in control of its task and its compensation. Rewards that verge on larceny." He also explains how the public realm is effectively controlled by the private sector. The arms industry is but one example of this: "While the Pentagon is still billed as being of the public sector, few doubt the influence of corporate power in its decisions."He also looks at the financial world which "sustains a large, active, well-rewarded community based on compelled but seemingly sophisticated ignorance," and in particular the Federal Reserve System, "our most prestigious form of fraud, our most elegant escape from reality." In essence, Galbraith says that the Fed, for all of its power and prestige, effectively does nothing. And he has little problem with this: "Let their ineffective role be accepted and forgiven." Both a guide to the present and an aid to shaping the future, this slim, satisfying book is a font of wisdom, conventional and otherwise, from a respected elder statesman in the twilight of his life. --Shawn Carkonen Customer Reviews (22)
Prescient Overview
Scathing analysis of fraud and corruption
Galbraith shares his vast experience in commenting about the current state of the American society
unsatisfying
Economics isn't real science |
79. A Modern Reader in Institutional and Evolutionary Economics: Key Concepts (In Association With the European Association of Evolutionary Political Economy (Eaepe).) | |
Paperback: 256
Pages
(2002-07-31)
list price: US$30.00 -- used & new: US$20.74 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 1840644958 Average Customer Review: Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
Editorial Review Product Description Essential reading for lecturers, researchers, graduates and advanced undergraduates in economics, business studies and sociology, this diverse yet complementary collection of essays will also find a broad readership among those wanting to understand the manifest changes apparent within modern socio-economic systems. Customer Reviews (1)
They tell me that it's evolution, well you know |
80. Economic Theories in China, 1979-1988 by Robert C. Hsu | |
Paperback: 216
Pages
(2005-11-24)
list price: US$45.00 -- used & new: US$38.36 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0521023149 Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan | |
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