Economics for the Common Good

Economics for the Common Good

Economics for the Common Good

Economics for the Common Good

Paperback(Reprint)

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Overview

From the Nobel Prize–winning economist, a bold new agenda for the role of economics in society

When Jean Tirole won the Nobel Prize in Economics, he suddenly found himself being stopped in the street by strangers and asked to comment on current events far from his own research. His transformation from academic economist to public intellectual prompted him to reflect more deeply on the role economists and their discipline play in society. The result is Economics for the Common Good, a passionate manifesto for a world in which economics can help us improve the shared lot of societies and humanity as a whole. To show how, Tirole shares his insights on a broad range of questions affecting our everyday lives and the future of our society, including global warming, unemployment, the post-2008 global financial order, the euro crisis, the digital revolution, innovation, and the proper balance between the free market and regulation. Compelling and accessible, Economics for the Common Good sets a new agenda for the role of economics in society.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691192253
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 05/14/2019
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 584
Sales rank: 1,093,851
Product dimensions: 5.20(w) x 7.90(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author

Jean Tirole, the winner of the 2014 Nobel Prize in Economics, is chairman of the Toulouse School of Economics and of the Institute for Advanced Study in Toulouse and a visiting professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments xi

Introduction Whatever Happened to the Common Good? 1

Itinerary 5

The Relationship between Society and Economics 7

The Economist’s Profession 8

Institutions 10

A Window on Our World 11

The Common Thread 12

I Economics And Society

1 Do You Like Economics? 17

What Prevents Our Understanding Economics 17

The Market and Other Ways of Managing Scarcity 24

How to Make Economics Better Understood 29

2 The Moral Limits of the Market 33

The Moral Limits of the Market or Market Failure? 36

The Noncommercial and the Sacred 40

The Market, a Threat to Social Cohesion? 47

Inequality 50

II The Economist’s Profession

3 The Economist in Civil Society 65

The Economist as Public Intellectual 66

The Pitfalls of Involvement in Society 70

A Few Safeguards for an Essential Relationship 76

From Theory to Economic Policy 78

4 The Everyday Life of a Researcher 80

The Interplay between Theory and Empirical Evidence 80

The Microcosm of Academic Economics 91

Economists: Foxes or Hedgehogs? 101

The Role of Mathematics 104

Game Theory and Information Theory 109

An Economist at Work: Methodological Contributions 118

5 Economics on the Move 122

An Agent Who Is Not Always Rational: Homo psychologicus 123

Homo socialis 137

Homo incitatus: The Counterproductive Effects of Rewards 141

Homo juridicus: Law and Social Norms 147

More Unexpected Lines of Inquiry 149

III An Institutional Framework For The Economy

6 Toward a Modern State 155

The Market Has Many Defects That Must Be Corrected 157

The Complementarity between the Market and the State and the Foundations of Liberalism 160

Politicians or Technocrats? 163

Reforming the State: The Example of France 169

7 The Governance and Social Responsibility of Business 174

Many Possible Organizations … but Few Are Chosen 175

And What Is Business’s Social Responsibility? 185

IV The Great Macroeconomic Challenges

8 The Climate Challenge 195

What Is at Stake in Climate Change? 195

Reasons for the Standstill 199

Negotiations That Fall Short of the Stakes Involved 206

Making Everyone Accountable for GHG Emissions 213

Inequality and the Pricing of Carbon 222

The Credibility of an International Agreement 226

In Conclusion: Putting Negotiations Back on Track 228

9 Labor Market Challenges 231

The Labor Market in France 233

An Economic Analysis of Labor Contracts 242

Perverse Institutional Incentives 245

What Can Reform Achieve and How Can It Be Implemented Successfully? 251

The Other Great Debates about Employment 255

The Urgency 261

10 Europe at the Crossroads 265

The European Project: From Hope to Doubt 265

The Origins of the Euro Crisis 267

Greece: Much Bitterness on Both Sides 282

What Options Do the EU and the Eurozone Have Today? 289

11 What Use Is Finance? 296

What Use Is Finance? 296

How to Transform Useful Products into Toxic Products 298

Are Markets Efficient? 306

Why Regulate in Fact? 321

12 The Financial Crisis of 2008 326

The Financial Crisis 327

The New Postcrisis Environment 335

Who Is to Blame? Economists and the Prevention of Crises 350

V The Industrial Challenge

13 Competition Policy and Industrial Policy 355

What Is the Purpose of Competition? 357

Where Does Industrial Policy Fit In? 365

14 How Digitization Is Changing Everything 378

Platforms: Guardians of the Digital Economy 379

Two-Sided Markets 382

A Different Business Model: Platforms as Regulators 389

The Challenges Two-Sided Markets Pose for Competition Policy 392

15 Digital Economies: The Challenges for Society 401

Trust 402

Who Owns Data? 405

Health Care and Risk 408

The New Forms of Employment in the Twenty-First Century 414

The Digital Economy and Employment 423

The Tax System 427

16 Innovation and Intellectual Property 430

The Imperative of Innovation 430

Intellectual Property 431

Managing Royalty Stacking 435

The Institutions of Innovation 443

Cooperative Development and Open Source Software 447

And Many Other Debates … 453

17 Sector Regulation 455

What’s at Stake 455

A Fourfold Reform and Its Rationale 456

Incentive Regulation 460

Prices of Regulated Companies 466

Regulation of Access to the Network 471

Competition and Universal Service 478

Epilogue 481

Notes 485

Index 551

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“I predict that Jean Tirole’s Economics for the Common Good will join Thomas Piketty’s Capital in the Twenty-First Century as the two most widely read and important books by economists yet to be published in this century. With Tirole’s terrific, wisdom-filled book, the world will be a better place.”—Glenn Loury, Brown University

“Jean Tirole is that rare exception, a Nobel laureate who believes he has a responsibility to talk clearly about the concerns of noneconomists. This exceptional book shows the value of careful economic thinking on issues ranging from unemployment to global warming. Required reading for anybody who wants to understand today’s economy.”—Olivier Blanchard, former Chief Economist of the International Monetary Fund

"Jean Tirole puts at center stage the essential contribution of economics, and economists, to our shared hopes and aspirations for the societies we live in. This is an essential book with a hopeful message for anyone concerned about the key economic challenges we all face today."—Diane Coyle, author of GDP: A Brief but Affectionate History

"Economics for the Common Good is a delightfully written and deeply insightful book, offering striking and illuminating paradoxes about economic behavior."—Harold James, Princeton University

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