Free-market economics has attempted to combine efficiency and
freedom by emphasizing the need for neutral rules and meta-rules.
These efforts have only been partly successful, for they have
failed to address the deeper, normative arguments justifying - and
limiting - coercion. This failure has thus left most advocates of
free-market vulnerable to formulae which either emphasize
expediency or which rely upon optimal social engineering to foster
different notions of the common will and of the common good. This
book offers the reader a new perspective on free-market economics,
one in which the defense of markets is no longer based upon the
utilitarian claim that free markets are more efficient; rather, the
defense of markets rests upon the moral argument that top-down
coercive policy-making is necessarily in tension with the
rights-based notion of justice typical of the Western
tradition.
In arguing for a consistent moral basis for the free-market
view, we depart from both the Austrian and neoclassical traditions
by acknowledging that rationality is not a satisfactory starting
point. This rejection of rationality as the complete motivator for
human economic behaviour throws constitutional economics and the
law-and-economics tradition into new relief, revealing these
approaches as governed by considerations derived by various notions
of social efficiency, rather than by principles consistent with
individual freedom, including freedom to choose.
This book shows that the solution is in fact a better
understanding of the lessons taught by the Scottish Enlightenment:
the role of the political context is to ensure that the individual
can pursue his own ends, free from coercion. This also implies
individual responsibility, respect for somebody else's preferences
and for his entrepreneurial instincts. Social virtue is not absent
from this understanding of politics, but rather than being defined
through the priorities of policy-makers, it emerges as the outcome
of interaction among self-determining individuals. The strongest
and most consistent case for free-market economics, therefore,
rests on moral philosophy, not on some version of static-efficiency
theorizing.
This book should be of interest to students and researchers
focussing on economic theory, political economics and the
philosophy of economic thought, but is also written in a
non-technical style making it accessible to an audience of
non-economists.
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