The essays in this book discuss human behavior and the institutions of capitalism. The essays are non-technical and are written so as to be accessible to students of all disciplines and to all other persons interested in capitalism and in economic behavior. They often present unconventional views of the topics they discuss. Those containing unconventional views discuss self-interested behavior, selfish gene theory, the meaning and social function of private ownership, the externality problem, the nature of the firm and the rise of capitalism. The essays are not meant to be a textbook, but they…mehr
The essays in this book discuss human behavior and the institutions of capitalism. The essays are non-technical and are written so as to be accessible to students of all disciplines and to all other persons interested in capitalism and in economic behavior. They often present unconventional views of the topics they discuss. Those containing unconventional views discuss self-interested behavior, selfish gene theory, the meaning and social function of private ownership, the externality problem, the nature of the firm and the rise of capitalism. The essays are not meant to be a textbook, but they offer a useful supplementary reading source for courses in business, economics and law that deal with human behavior in the marketplace and with capitalism, ownership, markets and firms.
Harold Demsetz is Arthur Anderson UCLA Alumni Emeritus Professor of Business Economics at the University of California, Los Angeles, where he has taught since 1971 and where he directed UCLA's business economics program. Counted among the world's 100 most eminent economists in Mark Blaug's book Great Economists since Keynes, his published work was recently ranked as among the top ten most frequently cited bodies of work by an economist. Who's Who in America and Who's Who in Economics, among other directories, include his biography.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Where economic man dwells 2. Economic man's escape from Mathus's population trap 3. Protecting you from yourself 4. Rescuing economic man from the selfish gene 5. Crossing disciplinary boundaries 6. The late arrival of capitalism 7. Ownership and exchange 8. Reinterpreting the externality problem 9. Firms and households as substitutes 10. The contrast between firms and political parties 11. The public corporation: its ownership and control 12. Public policy's indirect effects on the control, organization, and importance of firms.
1. Where economic man dwells 2. Economic man's escape from Mathus's population trap 3. Protecting you from yourself 4. Rescuing economic man from the selfish gene 5. Crossing disciplinary boundaries 6. The late arrival of capitalism 7. Ownership and exchange 8. Reinterpreting the externality problem 9. Firms and households as substitutes 10. The contrast between firms and political parties 11. The public corporation: its ownership and control 12. Public policy's indirect effects on the control, organization, and importance of firms.
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