1st Edition

Against Utility-Based Economics On a Life-Based Approach

By Anastasios Korkotsides Copyright 2013
    296 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    296 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Utility-based theory and the fallback choice-theoretic framework are shown to be biased, irremediably flawed and misleading. A radically different theory of value and of consumer behaviour is proposed based on existential interpretations of scarcity, value and self-interest. For self-conscious mortals, only time is scarce. All other is derivative scarcity. Value is in the life, as a knowledge extract of time, which goes into commodities as direct human labour and depreciated capital, through their production. By structuring their preferences, consumers try to confiscate more of such value per unit of expended income, extending their social presence, soothing their angst and gaining power over each other. This raises output and makes gains cancel out. Negative psychological externalities preclude any well-being or social-welfare type conclusion.

    These resolve a number of long-standing issues: endogenously generated growth, the micro-macro connection, the price mechanism, crises, unemployment, etc. Equilibrium is of a low-potential kind, not of a force-balancing one, and it is unique, reachable and stable. The relevant analytics involve purely economic, non-psychological entities. Consumer behaviour is grounded on a well-defined, structure-based decision criterion and on observably measurable magnitudes, only. The social ramifications of the two juxtaposed perspectives are discussed at length.

    Part I: The Beast  1. Introduction  2. Debunking Utility  3. Consumption in Social Context: On conceptual and other alchemy  4. Consuming Live: On goodness and rationality  5. On Life-Based Value: Consumption in Marx  Part II: Its Measurable Footprint  6. Analytics  7. Epilogue

    Biography

    Anastasios S. Korkotsides is Assistant Professor, Faculty of Economics, University of Athens, Greece.