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      Max U versus Humanomics: a critique of neo-institutionalism

      Journal of Institutional Economics
      Cambridge University Press (CUP)

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          Abstract

          ‘Institutions’ do not mean the same thing to Samuelsonian economists as they mean to other people. North's ‘rules of game’, like chess, dominates, even when it is claimed that ‘informal institutions’ are allowed into the tale. The tale is that institutions were once clotted, and then became unclotted, and the Great Enrichment occurred. But the enrichment was by a factor of upwards of a hundred, which cannot be explained by routine movements to an efficient equilibrium. And changes of institutions did not in fact happen much in England. Ethics changed, not laws and procedures. For presently poor countries, too, it will not suffice, as the World Bank and Acemoglu recommend, to add institutions and stir. Economies rely on ethics, which neo-institutionalists, being at heart Samuelsonian, have not wanted to admit. Ideas matter. Indeed, metaphors and stories matter, as in Searle's account.

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          Most cited references8

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          Public and private bureaucracies: a transaction cost economics perspectives

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            Intellectual Property Rights, the Industrial Revolution, and the Beginnings of Modern Economic Growth

            Joel Mokyr (2009)
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              Bourgeois Virtue and the History of P and S

              Since the triumph of a business culture a century and half ago the businessman has been scorned, and so the phrase “bourgeois virtue” sounds like an oxymoron. Economists since Bentham have believed that anyway virtue is beside the point: what matters for explanation is Prudence. But this is false in many circumstances, even strictly economic circumstances. An economic history that insists on Prudence Alone is misspecified, and will produce biased coefficients. And it will not face candidly the central task of economic history, an apology for or a criticism of a bourgeois society.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                Journal of Institutional Economics
                Journal of Institutional Economics
                Cambridge University Press (CUP)
                1744-1374
                1744-1382
                March 2016
                March 23 2015
                : 12
                : 01
                : 1-27
                Article
                10.1017/S1744137415000053
                4ffa63ec-ae1d-453f-b414-d688debca560
                © 2015
                History

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