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Capitalizt
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Feb 2005
Location: USA
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| quote: | Originally posted by LatinLover
capitalism is good. |
I changed my mind. If latin likes capitalism I guess I'm a socialist now.
f*ck!
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Sep-19-2008 16:43
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winston
ultraviolet catastrophe

Registered: Nov 2005
Location: Yggdrasill
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Institutional Economics
| quote: | Originally posted by The17sss
when capitalism makes people rich, they love it... when the risk doesn't go someone's way and it fails, those same people love socialism. |
According to Commons, "The difficulty in defining a field for the so-called institutional economics is the uncertainty of meaning of an institution. Sometimes an institution seems to mean a framework of laws or natural rights within which individuals act like inmates. Sometimes it seems to mean the behavior of the inmates themselves. Sometimes anything additional to or critical of the classical or hedonic economics is deemed to be institutional. Sometimes anything that is "economic behavior" is institutional. Sometimes anything that is "dynamic" instead of "static," or a "process" instead of commodities, or activity instead of feelings, or mass action instead of individual action, or management instead of equilibrium, or control instead of laissez faire, seems to be institutional economics.
"Historically this transactional psychology may he seen to have changed, and is changing continuously, so that the whole philosophies of capitalism, fascism or communism are variabilities of it. In the common-law decisions it is the changing distinctions between persuasion and coercion or duress, persuasion being considered the outcome of a reasonable status of either equality of opportunity, or fair competition, or equality of bargaining power, or due process of law. But economic coercion and physical duress are denials of these economic ideals, and nearly every case of economic conflict becomes an assumption or investigation, under its own circumstances, of the negotiational psychology of persuasion and coercion"
The majority of individuals dismiss the views expressed by individuals such as Thorstein Veblen and John R. Commons when approaching the real value of 'capitalism'.
"... the smallest unit of the institutional economists is a unit of activity -- a transaction, with its participants. Transactions intervene between the labor of the classic economists and the pleasures of the hedonic economists, simply because it is society that controls access to the forces of nature, and transactions are, not the "exchange of commodities," but the alienation and acquisition, between individuals, of the rights of property and liberty created by society, which must therefore be negotiated between the parties concerned before labor can produce, or consumers can consume, or commodities be physically exchanged..."
--"Institutional Economics" American Economic Review, vol. 21 (1931), pp.648-657.
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Sep-19-2008 17:14
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