1st Edition

The Crisis in Economics

Edited By Edward Fullbrook Copyright 2003
    236 Pages
    by Routledge

    240 Pages
    by Routledge

    Economics can be pretty boring. Drier than Death Valley, the discipline is obsessed with mathematics and compounds this by arrogantly assuming its techniques can be brought to bear on the other social sciences.
    It wasn't going to be long, therefore, before students started complaining. The vast majority have voted with their feet and signed up for business and management degrees, but in the past two years there has grown an important new movement that has decided to tackle those who think they run economics head-on. This is the Post-autistic Economics Network.
    The PAE Network started in France and has spread first to Cambridge and then other parts of the world. The name derives from the fact that mainstream economics has been accused of institutional autism, ie. qualitative impairment of social interaction, failure to develop peer relationships and lack of emotional and social reciprocity. In short, economics has lost touch with reality and has become way too abstract.
    This book charts the impact the PAE Network has had so far and constitutes a manifesto for a different kind of economics - it features key contributions from all the major voices in heterodox economics including Tony Lawson, Deirdre McCloskey, Geoff Hodgson, Sheila Dow and Warren Samuels.

    Introduction: a brief history of the post-autistic economics movement, PART I Documents, PART II Teaching, PART III Practice and ethics, Index

    Biography

    Edward Fullbrook

    'I see the book as an excellent tool to introduce undergradate and graduate students to a critical understanding of the current state of economics.  This is why I have assigned the book on my graduate course in microeconomic theory.' - Frederic S. Lee, Journal of Economic Issues

    "Every economics student and teacher as well as anyone interested in recent developments in intellectual and social trends should read The Crisis in Economics." Oeconomicus