Posted on October 24, 2010, 11:57 am, by Gordon Pearson, under
Corporate Governance,
Corporate Ownership,
Economic History,
Economic Theory,
Free Market Capitalism,
Management Practice,
Political Decision,
Public Sector.
Before the British coalition government’s proposed cuts were announced they were greeted by 39 top business people writing to the Daily Telegraph confirming that they would create the necessary jobs so as to make the public sector cuts work. That way tax rises might be avoided and long-term cuts in public sector activity achieved. For [...]
Posted on September 27, 2010, 2:33 pm, by Gordon Pearson, under
Economic History,
Economic Theory,
Financial Sector,
Free Market Capitalism,
Political Decision,
Regulation,
Uncategorized.
The Economist, an increasingly dogmatic apologist for the free market ideology, invited for its current issue, six academic economists to identify how they thought the financial crisis had changed the subject of economics. The answer is not a lot. So far as methods of teaching and research are concerned, nothing has changed, or is likely [...]
Posted on August 25, 2010, 11:01 am, by Gordon Pearson, under
Agency theory,
Corporate Ownership,
Economic History,
Economic Theory,
Free Market Capitalism,
Management Practice,
Shareholder Value.
Since Adam Smith’s example of the pin factory, economists have never been able to produce a satisfactory theory of the industrial firm. They’ve thought of it as a black box, expressed it as a production function involving such illuminating variables as price and quantity, and they’ve reduced it to the agency relationship falsely claiming managers [...]
Posted on July 19, 2010, 8:54 am, by Gordon Pearson, under
Bank Bonuses,
Corporate Governance,
Corporate Ownership,
Economic History,
Financial Reporting Council,
Financial Sector,
Free Market Capitalism,
Moral Hazard,
Shareholder Value.
“The directors of … companies, being the managers of other people’s money rather than their own, it cannot well be expected, that they should watch over it with the same anxious vigilance … Negligence and profusion must always prevail … in the management of the affairs of such a company.†So wrote Adam Smith 250 [...]
Posted on June 22, 2010, 9:35 am, by Gordon Pearson, under
Corporate Governance,
Corporate Ownership,
Economic History,
Economic Theory,
Free Market Capitalism,
Management History,
Management Practice,
Management Theory,
Political Decision,
Public Sector,
Shareholder Value.
Keynes recognised that the legislation protecting worker’s rights might lead to powerful trades unions, motivated by political ideals rather than the long term interests of their members, being the cause of wages led inflation damaging economic activity. His mistake was to argue that it was a political problem for governments, rather than a problem for [...]