Posted on January 9, 2011, 1:58 pm, by Gordon Pearson, under
Corporate Governance,
Economic History,
Economic Theory,
Free Market Capitalism,
Management Practice,
Management Theory,
Political Decision,
Public Sector,
Shareholder Value,
free trade ideology.
The economic mainstream has flowed on its capital oriented way with relatively little deviation despite its manifest limitations, errors, omissions and downright falsehoods. And despite the occasional disasters to which it gives rise.
In the middle of last century, J M Keynes corrected some of the more apparent errors of the classical model, but his [...]
A retrospective of this year’s postings would highlight some of the flaws in accepted economic theory. Many have been flagged up elsewhere: economic theory is not, and never has been, without its severe and knowledgeable critics. However, there are a couple of errors which are fundamental to the study of economics which are not often [...]
Posted on December 12, 2010, 11:19 pm, by Gordon Pearson, under
Climate Change,
Co-operation,
Corporate Governance,
Economic History,
Economic Theory,
Financial Sector,
Free Market Capitalism,
Regulation,
free trade ideology.
In a recent article in The New York Review of Books, Michael Tomasky suggested the lack of any alternative big theme gave the free marketeers a head start in shaping and continuing to dominate the United States economy. The free market big theme may have been planted by Adam Smith, but it developed on the [...]
Posted on November 14, 2010, 8:21 pm, by Gordon Pearson, under
Agency theory,
Corporate Ownership,
Economic History,
Economic Theory,
Financial Sector,
Moral Hazard,
Shareholder Value.
The idea of economic man, sometimes given a Latin nomenclature to increase its gravitas, is the real cause of economics’ more recent failures. Forty years ago it was referred to as a nineteenth century idea, as though the study of economics had moved on since that primitive Victorian era. But with Friedman’s shareholder primacy in [...]
Posted on November 6, 2010, 11:01 am, by Gordon Pearson, under
Company Law,
Corporate Governance,
Corporate Ownership,
Economic History,
Economic Theory,
Financial Sector,
Free Market Capitalism,
Shareholder Value,
Stakeholder theory.
The idea that companies, if not all economic activity, exists to maximise the wealth of shareholders or owners, dominates the world of corporate governance and much else. Bankers and traders believe it. Industrial managers have been led to accept it. Universities and business schools preach it. It is part of the free market ideology, often [...]