forms of self-governance complementing markets. This quick summary hardly does justice to the many deep reflections and subtle discussions that Dobuzinskis offers while discussing these authors and theories. His account… Click to show full abstract
forms of self-governance complementing markets. This quick summary hardly does justice to the many deep reflections and subtle discussions that Dobuzinskis offers while discussing these authors and theories. His account is rooted in the literature on the history of economic ideas. Although he shares some judgments with older writers (e.g., Schumpeter’s claim that Adam Smith’s role was mostly that of a synthesizer of earlier ideas, see chap. 2), he also takes up recent contributions, e.g., on the inclination of a number of nineteenth-century economists toward eugenics (pp. 97–98, 111–12). Dobuzinskis guides the reader through the thicket of economic thinking, and although one sometimes wonders about specific directions—such as the order of presentation—the overall picture becomes laudably clear. These chapters are exemplars of balanced and thoughtful scholarship, and they are beautifully written. One wants to recommend the book to every economics student who, these days, is unlikely to learn about the historical development of their discipline in the standard undergraduate curriculum. For readers already somewhat familiar with the material, the book offers a welcome update, bringing to attention recent research and debates and almost certainly providing some aspects or dimensions that they have not encountered before. Concerning Dobuzinskis’s own views, and especially his suggestion to strengthen a “civil economy,” there is certainly much to be recommended. However, in the spirit of constructive criticism, and following his call for more dialogue between the friends and critics of markets, let me end on some points where I disagree. Dobuzinskis suggests a “modified Rawlsian rule according to whenever public policymakers wish to move in the direction of greater fairness, they may do so only insofar as such measures do not violate anyone’s fundamental liberties,” combined with criteria of “feasibility” and “appropriateness” (p. 17). This is rather vague, and what he means by “appropriate”—that something “rests on good evidence rather than on wishful thinking” (p. 17)—is an epistemic, not a moral, criterion that, of course, should hold for all policy proposals, yet it shifts the debate to what counts as good evidence.With Gerald Gaus, Dobuzinskis rejects the “tyranny of the ideal” (p. 18). But one wonders whether he risks falling into the tyranny of the status quo instead, accepting too much of what is currently accepted by economists as unchangeable. It is hard to object to reciprocity-based institutions, but it also seems that they often have a hard time in an environment in which powerful global corporations call the shots in many markets. Dobuzinskis rejects Polanyi’s metaphor of “reembedding” the economy (p. 262), because he proposes a more positive view of markets, such that human sociability can find its expression in them. But a civil economy might presuppose changes in the power relations between capitalist firms and politics if it hopes to not remain a niche phenomenon. Relatedly, Dobuzinskis takes no clear position on property rights. He describes them as “an institution we have learned over time to recognize as being immensely useful and beneficial” (p. 16) but does not go into detail about the enormous variety of property rights and their role in the economy. It is not a priori clear, I would argue, that all those varieties serve either the welfare of individuals or the construction of a “civil economy” as he imagines it. Dobuzinskis speaks of budgetary constraints on governments and how they tie their hands (p. 363) without considering how different tax regimes could, in fact, lessen those constraints. In the face of the blatant economic inequalities of our days and the unequal amounts of political power they imply, my own reading of the situation is that a more radical rethinking of our economic system is needed, one that concerns the compatibility of economic institutions not only with moral values but also with democracy.Discussing this and many other questions, however, will probably require exactly the kind of dialogue between economists and philosophers to which this book is such a wonderful invitation.
               
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