1st Edition

Freedom and Adaptive Preferences

By Carl Christian von Weizsäcker Copyright 2024
    254 Pages 22 Color Illustrations
    by Routledge

    254 Pages 22 Color Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Traditional welfare economics works with the assumption of the fully rational economic agent (homo economicus) whose preferences are fixed: that is, they are not influenced by their economic environment. To the contrary, this book presents a theory of welfare economics that maintains the principles of normative individualism while allowing for adaptive or changeable preferences.

    Why do economists talk of preferences? In this book, Carl Christian von Weizsäcker shows that the concept is intimately related to freedom of action. The concept of preferences is the mode by which normative economics introduces the idea of freedom or liberty into its theory of human interaction. Moreover, economic research of recent decades has provided a large amount of experimental and other empirical findings - e.g. the work on bounded rationality - which contradicts the assumption of fixed preferences. This book argues that this large body of findings is consistent with the hypothesis of adaptive preferences. This, together with the proposition that adaptive preferences allow a generalization of traditional welfare economics, has implications for policy applications of behavioral economics based on “normative individualism”. Normative individualism is an approach which intrinsically connects with the value of liberty or freedom. It is argued that normative individualism is indispensable for a society of free citizens: thus, providing the foundations of civil liberty.

    This book will be of great interest to readers of welfare economics, behavioural economics and economic theory.

    Book I: Introduction: The Concept of „Preferences“, Chapter 1: Normative Individualism, Chapter 2: “Preferences” in Positive and in “Normative” Economics, Chapter 3: “Compossibility” of Freedom Rights, Chapter 4: Preference Systems: The Comparability Problem, Chapter 5: Overview of the following Books II to VI, Book II: The Class Room Model of Adaptive Preferences, Chapter 6: Introduction and Definitions, Chapter 7: Improvement Sequences, Chapter 8: Theorem 1 for the Classroom Model, Chapter 9: Prices and Quantities: A Simple Example, Chapter 10: The “Meaning” of the Long Run Demand Function. Theorem 2A, Chapter 11: Kaldor-Hicks-Scitovsky with Adaptive Preferences, Chapter 12: Social Welfare Function with Adaptive Preferences, Annex for Book II: Proof of Acyclic Improvement Sequences for the Class Room Model, Book III: The Real World Model (Continuous Time Model), Chapter 13: Introduction; Theorem 1B for n ≥ 2, Chapter 14: Theorem 2B for n > 2, Chapter 15: Equivalence Theorem 1. (Theorem 1C), Chapter 16: Theorem 2 for the Continuous Time  Model (Real World Model), Chapter 17: Theorem 1 for the Real World Model, Mathematical Annex to Book III, Book IV: Freedom and the Phenomenology of Adaptive Preferences, Chapter 18: Freedom and Compossibility, Chapter 19: Phenomenology of Adaptive Preferences and Pragmatic Compossibility, Chapter 20: Phenomenology of Adaptive Preferences: Intertemporal Complementarity, Chapter 21: Digging Deeper into Adaptive Preferences, Book V: Interpersonal Influences on Preferences, Chapter 22: Adaptive Preferences as a Result of Evolution, Chapter 23: Non-Convexity of Preferences: Phishing for Phools, Chapter 24: Freedom Mode and Causal Mode of Government Action, Chapter 25: Imitation of Others: A Case of Adaptive Preferences; Advertising, Chapter 26: Complexity, Private Property, Democracy, Public Goods, Chapter 27: Two Generalized Media of Exchange: Karl Popper vs Erich Fromm, Chapter 28: Three Levels of Economic Activity. Externalities, Chapter 29: Social Market Economy, Book VI: Partial Equilibrium Welfare Economics for a Free Society with Adaptive Preferences, Chapter 30: Introduction, Chapter 31: Cost-Benefit-Analysis with Adaptive Preferences, Part 1, Chapter 32: Cost-Benefit-Analysis with Adaptive Preferences, Part 2, Chapter 33: Pragmatics of Incomplete Compossibility, Chapter 34: Private Anticipation of Preference Change: Innovation, Chapter 35: Concluding Remarks

    Biography

    Carl Christian von Weizsäcker received his PhD in 1961 from the University of Basel for a dissertation in which he showed that the optimal rate of interest is equal to the growth rate. Edmund Phelps published the same result also in 1961 and called it the “Golden Rule of Accumulation.” Following research visits at MIT and the University of Cambridge, he became full professor of economics in Heidelberg at the age of 27. From 1968 to 1970, he taught as a full professor at the Economics Department of MIT. His students included Robert Merton, Robert Shiller and Stanley Fischer. During these years, he co-authored papers with Paul Samuelson and Robert Solow in the field of capital theory and macroeconomics. Later, Carl Christian von Weizsäcker turned to topics in industrial economics, with special emphasis on Schumpeterian economics, the economics of telecommunications and energy economics. He developed a theory of adaptive preferences that can serve as a basis for welfare economics beyond the homo economicus. He also co-authored a book on macroeconomics. He taught at the universities of Bielefeld, Bonn, Bern and Cologne. Since his retirement from teaching, he has been working at the Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods, Bonn (Germany).

    In 1977, he was elected to the Board of Academic Advisors of the German Minister for Economic Affairs, of which he is still a member today. From 1986 to 1998, he was a member of Germany’s Monopolies Commission, and from 1989 to 1998, he was its chair.

    Carl Christian von Weizsäcker, former Chairman of the German Monopoly Commission, is a Fellow of the Econometric Society, and is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the North Rhine-Westphalian Academy of Sciences, and Germany’s National Academy of Science and Engineering.