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Whither Socialism? (Wicksell Lectures) (Paperback)
$31.64 - Save $1.67 (5%) - RRP $33.31 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 24 hours | |Short Description for Whither Socialism?This text proposes an alternative to the neoclassical economic model, based on the economics of information, that provides theoretical insight into the workings of a market economy and guidance for the setting of policy in transitional economies.
Full description- Publisher: MIT Press
- Published: 01 April 1996
- Format: Paperback 352 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Politics & Government | Socialism & Left-of-centre Democratic Ideologies | Economics | Economic Theory & Philosophy | Economic Systems & Structures
- ISBN 13: 9780262691826 ISBN 10: 0262691825
- Sales rank: 562,245
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Full description for Whither Socialism?
The rapid collapse of socialism has raised new economic policy questions and revived old theoretical issues. In this book, Joseph Stiglitz explains how the neoclassical, or Walrasian model (the formal articulation of Adam Smith's invisible hand), which has dominated economic thought over the past half century, may have wrongly encouraged the belief that market socialism could work. Stiglitz proposes an alternative model, based on the economics of information, that provides greater theoretical insight into the workings of a market economy and clearer guidance for the setting of policy in transitional economies.Stiglitz sees the critical failing in the standard neoclassical model underlying market socialism to be its assumptions concerning information, particularly its failure to consider the problems that arise from lack of perfect information and from the costs of acquiring information. He also identifies problems arising from its assumptions concerning completeness of markets, competitiveness of markets, and the absence of innovation. Stiglitz argues that not only did the existing paradigm fail to provide much guidance on the vital question of the choice of economic systems, the advice it did provide was often misleading.The Wicksell Lectures

