1st Edition

The Just Economy

By Richard Winfield Copyright 1988
262 Pages
by Routledge

262 Pages
by Routledge

262 Pages
by Routledge

First Published in 1988, Richard Dien Winfield's The Just Economy investigates what the economy should be, undertaking a normative inquiry ignored by contemporary economists. Drawing upon Hegel's Philosophy of Right, Winfield's book shows how justice lies in self-determination, how the economy can realize social freedom, and how economic relations must be regulated to uphold family welfare,... Read more

Introduction Part I: Economic Justice as a Problematic Area 1. The Systematic Exclusions of Economic Relations from the Domain of Justice 2. Unsystematic Ethical Conceptions of the Economy 3. The Normative Confusions of Marx’s Economic Theory Part II: Conceiving the Just Economy 4. Hegel’s Mandate for the Just Economy 5. The Elementary Structure of Market Freedom 6. The Place of Capital in the Market Economy 7. Classes, Estates, and Economic Justice 8. Commodity Relations and the Enforcement of Economic Justice 9. The Limits of Private Intervention in the Market 10. The Normative Principles of Public Intervention in the Market 11. The Limits of the Public Enforcement of Economic Welfare Notes Index

Biography

Richard Dien Winfield