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Institutional stream in modern economics: NeoIE versus NewIE

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Title: Nurt instytucjonalny we wsp czesnej ekonomii Neoinstytucjonalizm (ENI) a Nowa Ekonomia Instytucjonalna (NEI) Author: Bbogus a Fiedor – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Institutional stream in modern economics: NeoIE versus NewIE


1
Institutional stream in modern economics NeoIE
versus NewIE
2
NeoIE versus NewIE origins and main
methodological and cognitive differences
  • 1. New Institutional Economics (NeoIE)
  • Generally, alike the classical institutionalism
    (T. Veblen, J. R. Commons, W.C. Mitchell, J. M.
    Clark) rejection of basic methodological
    assumptions of NCE, and methodological
    indiwidualism in particular
  • Critique of the definition of economics as a
    science within the mainstreram economics, and, in
    particular ofv broadly understood neoclassical or
    neo-neoclassical economics
  • In general approach, NeoIE,, alike Veblenian
    institutionalism, is a critique of the manner in
    which the whole process of economic development,
    and of development of capitralist economy, is
    understood. (rejectiing, however, the sociaal
    pesimism of Veblen). According to NeoIE, the
    economic development is an evolutionary social
    process and not neoclassically interpretred
    process of equilibrium grfowth

3
NeoIE versus NewIE origins and main
methodological and cognitive differencesNeoinstit
utional Economics
  • Rejection of hedonism (as philosophical and
    methodological foundation for research on
    microeconomic behavior) and the UMH (hypothesis
    of micrtoeconomic rationality. Implicitly,
    rejection of the homo oeconomicus concept
  • Adoption of psychology of instincts (Veblen),
    and later (NeoIE C.Ayres, J. M. Clark,
    Galbraith, Myrdal)) of philsophy of pragmatism
    (J. Dewey pragmatic value theory of Ayres,
    concept of reasonable values of Mitchell) and
    behavioral psychology as foundations for the
    epxlanation of microeconomic activities

4
NeoIE versus NewIE origins and main
methodological and cognitive differencesNeoinstit
utional Economics
  • Specific way of intrpretation of economic
    system, as evolutionary process whose main part
    is culture
  • Most important dychotomy of human being (Veblen)
    contradiction between the instinct of good work
    and the instinct of posession
  • Subsequent dychotomic contradictions
  • Between physical flow (flow of useful goods) and
    financial flow
  • Between world (class) of industry and world
    of posession (leisure class))
  • Conflict between those two worlds means also
    conflict between cultural institutions which
    are useful or futile (useless) form the point of
    view of social and economic development

5
NeoIE versus NewIE origins and main
methodological and cognitive differencesNeoinstit
utional Economics
  • Rejection of economic determinism and adoption of
    the view that develoment is mostly determined by
    science and technology, with inert character of
    culture and institutional basis
  • Rejection of the concept of objective laws or
    regularities in socio-economic development one
    can speak only of a certain logics of development
    (Galbraith, Myrdal). It consist in plausible, but
    not necessary, adjustments of culture and
    institutions to the imperatives brought about by
    permanently developing (changing) science and
    technology
  • Social pesimism of Veblen and its rejection by
    his followers - postveblenian economists,
    neoinstitutionalists

6
NeoIE versus NewIE origins and main
methodological and cognitive differencesNeoinstit
utional Economics
  • Rejection of neoclassical way of understanding
    the economic equlibrium
  • Commons equlibrium (reasonable economy) as an
    optimal allocation of scarce resources which is
    attained not through market competition but as
    the outcome of collective actions and control
  • Galbraith equlibrium as process (and not the
    state) resulting from the action of
    countervailing powers corporations,trade unions,
    the state as intermediary agent

7
NeoIE versus NewIE origins and main
methodological and cognitive differences New
Institutional Economics
  • Two manners od interpreting NIE
  • As an integral part of widely understood
    neoclassical economics, as neoclassical theory of
    institutions (the so called theoretical
    institutionalism, as opposed to postveblenian
    one)
  • As a new paradigm in contemporary economics
  • Genesis of NIE (decades of 70. and 80. of XX
    century)
  • External critique of institutional deficit of
    NCE
  • Increasing empirical knowledge on the
    significance of institutions both informal and
    formal in modern economic and technological
    development and subsequent necessity of
    theoretical reflection on them

8
NeoIE versus NewIE origins and main
methodological and cognitive differences New
Institutional Economics
  • Origins and development of theoretical
    foundations
  • Theory of transactions costs (R. Coase as the
    founder/precursor and O.E. Williamson as main
    follower)
  • Theory of property rights (main theoreticians H.
    Demsetz and A.A. Alchian)
  • TR and PR theories are two principal
    methodological and theoretical foundations within
    the main stream economics for investigations on
    the role of institutions in modern economies

9
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • Property rights (economic approach)
  • Entitlements (rights), shaped in the historical
    process by law (normative), customs and
    morality, which define and confine (with regard
    to other persons) the scope of appropriating and
    using economic resources and goods (in other
    words laws of disposal)
  • Since most goods are not pure private goods,
    there occur many direct (technological) external
    effects in the economy and there appears the
    necessity of their internalization

10
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • Property rights (economic approach) cont.
  • Internalization requires changes in
    legal-institutional arrangements (in the so
    called informal institutions).Their analysis
    becomes subject to economic analysis
  • Fundamental function of PR is to create
    incentives for increasing the scope of
    internalization of external effects

11
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • Transaction costs (KT) in narrow approach (COASE,
    WILLIAMSON)
  • In broadest interpretation, TC are the costs of
    using the price (market) mechanism
  • Types of transaction costs (Coase)
  • TC related to seeking and processing information
    which is necessary for shaping market prices of
    goods
  • TC related to negotiations of contracts
    (agreements) (producers purchasers, purchasers
    - deliverers, etc.)
  • TC linked to the control of execution of contracts

12
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • TC in broad approach
  • Costst of coordination of various forms of
    economic activity (coordination by state versus
    coordination by market)
  • Costs which are necessary for the emergence and
    development of markets

13
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • TC and PR - interdependence
  • Inaccurate definition and/or attenuation of
    propert rights, and incapability of internalizing
    (apprioprating) benefits related to them in
    particular, must result in increasing transaction
    costs in the economy, weakening of the system
    of microeconomic incentives, and this way in
    general decline of the level of economic
    rationality or efficiency.

14
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • Reasons for high level and types of TC in the
    countries with command-and-control system (the
    countries of the so called real socialism)
  • High TC linked to the central macroeconomic
    planning
  • High TC related to a broad scope of non-market
    distribution of public goods
  • High TC of extensive system of social transfers
  • Attenuation of PR as the reason for broad
    occurence of rent seeking behavior in the sphere
    of functional distribution of social product
  • Rent seeking as standard (routine) behavior for
    menagerial staff of state owned enetrprises and
    their employees
  • High positional and bureaucratic rents (menagers
    of SOEs and political nomenclature)

15
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • Nature of the transformation process from the
    point of view of NIE
  • General definition transition from socialist CC
    economy towards a market economy as politically
    and economically determined institutional change
  • Definition based on the TK/PR theories
    transition from socialist CC economy towards a
    market economy as a gradual transformation of the
    system which is characterized by predomination of
    rent seeking microeconomic behavior towards the
    system within which prevail the efficiency-driven
    activities of human beings and social groups

16
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • Criterion of minimization of TC
  • General criterion of the growth of economic
    efficiency
  • It theoretically allows for answering two
    fundamental questions
  • What is optimal size of the enterprise
    (equalizing of marginal costs of transactions
    carried out within the enterprise
    intra-enterprise transactions - and marginal
    costs of market transactions)
  • Why exist enterprises and the market as
    alternative co-ordinative mechanisms

17
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • New Economic History (NEH) and New Political
    Economy (NPE) analysis of TC in the long-run
    (secular) perspective
  • Criterion of minimization of TC as a general
    foundation for expaining how varoius
    legal-institutional and economic systems change
    in long time periods
  • Effective institutional order is characterized by
    the existence of such property rights regime and
    microeconomic incentives system, as well as
    co-ordination mechanisms, which permit the owners
    of production factors to appriopriate benefits
    resulting from the use of those factors (thus
    minimizing the scope of occurrence of external
    effects and free-rider behavior)

18
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • NEH and i NPE cont.
  • Economic theory of state the concept of J.
    Buchannan
  • Pre-state period (pre-constitutive order)
  • Its main feature is a very high level of
    uncertainty of economic activity (transactions,
    contracts, etc.). Principal task of the emerging
    state is therefore to establish the so called
    pre-constitutive property rights and formal
    institutions corresponding/related to them. The
    state has also to ensure that adequate rules of
    game (informal institutiuons) are observed in
    order to diminish the level of general
    uncertainty in the economy and to exclude (or
    radically confine) the possibility of attaining
    economic benefits through the robbery This way,
    the protective state (in Buchannans approach) is
    crreated

19
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • Economic theory of state the concept of J.
    Buchannan
  • Post-constitutive property rights emerge as the
    outcome of market exchange of goods. If those
    exchange contracts are to be effective and
    complete, it is necessary to
  • 1) liberalize (to free from state control)
    prices and trade,
  • 2) gradually introduce (allow for) both domestic
    and foreign competition
  • 3) establish capital (financial) markets
  • All this is possible when the statet creates
    foundations of sound macroeconomic regime, as
    well as when the state follows the regulation
    policy which is cnsistent with general principles
    of market economy. This way, the so called
    regulative state emerges

20
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • Economic theory of state the concept of J.
    Buchannan
  • As in any market economy, also in emerging market
    economies the state has also to produce or to
    provide public goods or ,at least, to finance
    the costs of their production and distribution.
    This means, respectively, the emergence of
    productive state.

21
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • State from the NIE perspective (with special
    reference to New Political Economy) a general
    approach
  • NIE, and TCT and PRT in particular, provide
    theoretical arguments which allow for answering a
    fundamental question why there exist the state
    and the market as alternative mechanisms of
    economic co-ordination and opimization (Coase
    criterion)

22
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • NIE, and NPE in particular, identify economic and
    social mechanisms which underlay the process of
    working out and and accepting specific solutions
    within the macroeconomic and sectoral policies,
    as well as within the public regulation.
    Furthermore, NIE helps to explain the
    contradictions between those policies
  • NIE pays attention to the necessity of ongoing
    active role of the state in the sphere of shaping
    legal-constitutional foundations of economic
    order

23
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • NEH and NPE cont.
  • Economic theory of public regulation in the
    market economy
  • Point of reference interpretation of public
    regulation as specific commodity and the need to
    define the supply of and demand on this commodity
  • Differently from the so called normative
    regulation theory, the economic theory of public
    regulation assumes that the regulation is
    (mostly) designed for attaining goals of specific
    interest groups

24
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • Economic theory of public regulation in the
    market economy cont.
  • Basic assertions of ET of PR
  • Main resource of the state is the power to coerce
  • Utility function of politicians (policy makers)
    achieving and/or maintaining the (political)
    power
  • Regulation is usually more advantageous for
    producers than for consumers

25
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • Basic assertions of ET of PR cont.
  • The game of group interests leads usually to
    optimal distribution of benefits from the
    regulation between entrepreneurs (deliverers of
    goods and commodities), politicians (as
    legislators) and regulatory institutions
    (regulators)
  • Examples of ET of PR capture theory of
    regulation), theory of regulation based on the
    concept of agent and principal
  • Ecclectic theory of PR

26
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • General definition of NIE Based on criteria of
    economic rationality, as well on the assumptions
    of methodological individualism
  • analysis of formal and informal institutions of
    economic and political life.
  • Analysis in terms of economic rationality of
    different socio-political orders and
    interdependencies between those orders and the
    performance of the economic system

27
New Institutional Economics basic categories
and assertions
  • Basic components of broadly understood NIE
  • Neoinstitutional theory of the firm Coase,
    Williamson
  • Economic theory of politics (New Political
    Economy or Theory of Public Choice) Buchannan,
    Tullock
  • Analysis /theory of long-run (secular) dynamics
    (changeability) of socio-economic systems (New
    Economic History) North, Thomas
  • New Economic Gegraphy (application of NIE to the
    analysis of spatial aspects of economic
    performance and the change of economic structures
    over time)
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