Economics in a Changed Universe

Joseph E. Stiglitz, Globalization, and the Death of 'Free Enterprise'

By (author) Gerald L. Houseman

Publication date:

29 May 2008

Length of book:

174 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

241x162mm
6x10"

ISBN-13: 9780739127148

A revolution in economics, politics, and international affairs has been shaped by the new economics of information. For the first time, we are able to look at our world through a lens illuminated by a much more precise understanding of how economies work and how individuals, groups, and corporations react to them. All of the disciplines of the social sciences are affected by this development but the greatest impact we can expect will be upon public policy-making. Joseph E. Stiglitz and his fellow Nobel Prize-winners have demonstrated, with the precision and force of logic, reason, and mathematics, that the folklore of what has been regarded as "political economy" for the past two hundred and thirty years has misled us with ideological and mystical but useless ideas such as "free enterprise" and the immutability of market "givens."

Houseman describes and demonstrates the new resonance, liveliness, and optimism which characterize the economics of information, calling upon his own experience with "Third World" issues and problems. He also looks at this new (but often ignored) economics as a challenge to the existing literature of the social sciences and to the practices and assumptions of policy-makers, interest groups such as environmentalists, labor, and multinational corporations, "think tanks," international organizations such as the IMF and World Bank, and political activists. Effectively arguing that the changed universe of economics requires any of us concerned with world affairs to re-think and adjust our assumptions, Houseman provides us with the necessary insight to apply this new paradigm to real-world problems.
This is an important book. Anyone who notices a significant disconnect between the overblown rhetoric of big business and government and the reality that we face—like skyrocketing gasoline prices, the loss of middle class America, and increasing burdens on the poor—should read this book. Gerald Houseman clearly and concisely makes the case that Joseph Stiglitz is an important and prescient economist who champions the economics of information and exposed the term "Free Enterprise" as the fraud that justifies the great inequalities that exist in the world. If George Orwell's classic, 1984, troubled you, this book is for you. Houseman discusses the disturbing, Orwellian reality before us and leaves us asking ourselves: Will the great fraud of big business prevail or will truth and justice triumph?