Political Economy of Participatory Economics

Regular price €49.99
A01=Michael Albert
A01=Robin Hahnel
Aggregate demand
Author_Michael Albert
Author_Robin Hahnel
Behavioral economics
Capitalism
Category=KC
Commodity fetishism
Competition (economics)
Consumer
Consumer behaviour
Consumer choice
Consumption (economics)
Cost-benefit analysis
Decentralized planning (economics)
Decision-making
Demand
Economic democracy
Economic efficiency
Economic equilibrium
Economic Life
Economic planning
Economic problem
Economic security
Economic surplus
Economics
Economist
Economy
Efficiency
Employment
Endogeneity (econometrics)
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Externality
Facilitation board (economics)
General equilibrium theory
Incentive
Income
Income distribution
Institutional economics
Iteration
Journal of Economic Theory
Labor theory of value
Market (economics)
Market economy
Market mechanism
Market price
Marxian economics
Mathematical economics
Microeconomics
Opportunity cost
Output (economics)
Ownership (psychology)
Pareto efficiency
Participatory economics
Participatory planning
Participatory politics
Planning
Political economy
Preference (economics)
Price signal
Profit maximization
Public finance
Rational choice theory
Shadow price
Social cost
Social welfare function
Socialist calculation debate
Supply (economics)
Supply and demand
Tax
Theory of the firm
Value (economics)
Welfare economics
Welfare state
Workplace

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691003849
  • Weight: 595g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Apr 1991
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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With the near bankruptcy of centrally planned economies now apparent and with capitalism seemingly incapable of generating egalitarian outcomes in the first world and economic development in the third world, alternative approaches to managing economic affairs are an urgent necessity. Until now, however, descriptions of alternatives have been unconvincing. Here Michael Albert and Robin Hahnel support the libertarian socialist tradition by presenting a rigorous, well-defined model of how producers and consumers could democratically plan their interconnected activities. After explaining why hierarchical production, inegalitarian consumption, central planning, and market allocations are incompatible with "classlessness," the authors present an alternative model of democratic workers' and consumers' councils operating in a decentralized, social planning procedure. They show how egalitarian consumption and job complexes in which all engage in conceptual as well as executionary labor can be efficient. They demonstrate the ability of their planning procedure to yield equitable and efficient outcomes even in the context of externalities and public goods and its power to stimulate rather than subvert participatory impulses. Also included is a discussion of information management and how simulation experiments can substantiate the feasibility of their model.