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El. knyga: Capitalism, Socialism and Property Rights: Why market socialism cannot substitute the market

(University of Wroclaw, Poland)
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Mar-2018
  • Leidėjas: Agenda Publishing
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788210362
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  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Mar-2018
  • Leidėjas: Agenda Publishing
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788210362
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Mateusz Machaj offers an in-depth examination of one of the defining issues that separates capitalism from socialism—the system of ownership or property rights—to highlight fundamental problems in the market socialism model. He shows that the mechanism of efficiency in market socialism is unable to play the part ascribed to it by its theoreticians.

The comparative analysis of socialist and capitalist economic systems has given rise to a voluminous literature in the history of economic thought, yet detailed analysis of the “market socialism” model, which seeks to imitate the functional efficiency of capitalism by simulating a competitive economy, has been relatively neglected. In this work, Mateusz Machaj seeks to redress this imbalance by providing an in-depth examination of one of the defining issues that separates capitalism from socialism—the system of ownership, or property rights—which, when explored, highlight fundamental problems in the market socialism model.

Taking a broadly Austrian perspective, he shows that the mechanism of efficiency in market socialism is unable to play the part ascribed to it by its theoreticians, because it disregards the fact that property rights are fundamental to the shaping of prices and thus the abolition of ownership in market socialism makes its mechanism of efficiency a fiction. Indeed, Machaj argues, the economic terms used in the model of market capitalism only mirror the names of the real economic variables that cause capitalism to be efficient, not their functions. The book offers new and original insights into the theory of competition, theories of pricing, property laws, and the relation between law and economics, as well as the economics of the market-socialism model. It will be of interest to a wide range of heterodox economists.
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction 1(4)
Chapter 1 Legal fundamentals of economic systems
5(14)
1.1 Economic analysis and the concept of property
5(8)
1.2 The problem of the "economic analysis of law" and relations between law and economics
13(1)
1.3 Natural law and positive law
14(5)
Chapter 2 Evolution of the socialist calculation challenge
19(28)
2.1 Mises and the (un)resolvable puzzle
19(10)
2.2 Taylor's project
29(4)
2.3 Hayek's attempted solution
33(14)
Chapter 3 Neoclassical cruising around the Misesian challenge
47(22)
3.1 A proposed mathematical solution
47(4)
3.2 Lange's competitive model
51(7)
3.3 Schumpeter's mechanistic approach
58(6)
3.4 Walter Eucken: the debate's most underestimated contributor
64(5)
Chapter 4 Property and the market process
69(32)
4.1 Ownership and the foundations of society and the economy
69(7)
4.2 Ownership and the development of money
76(3)
4.3 Ownership and the pricing of heterogeneous resources
79(11)
4.4 Consumer sovereignty and the distribution of income
90(3)
4.5 Theories of valuation: ownership and mathematics
93(8)
Chapter 5 Property in the dynamics of the market process
101(32)
5.1 Calculation, intellectual division of labour and dispersion of knowledge
101(7)
5.2 Ownership-based analysis of profits and losses
108(5)
5.3 Ownership of factors of production and consumer sovereignty
113(4)
5.4 The entrepreneurial division of labour versus division of labour
117(3)
5.5 The stock exchange and corporate governance
120(3)
5.6 Why doesn't one giant company form in the free market?
123(10)
Chapter 6 On the path to socialism: imperialism, bureaucracy and monopolization
133(22)
6.1 Bureaucratization and the market
133(5)
6.2 Remarks on imperialism and class struggle
138(7)
6.3 Monopoly and competition
145(10)
Chapter 7 The nature of socialism
155(16)
Conclusion 171(4)
Notes 175(32)
Bibliography 207(16)
Index 223
Mateusz Machaj is Assistant Professor of Economics at the University of Wroclaw, Poland.