Summary w4 r3 Chaudhry, The Myhts of The Market - PDF 1680126135
Summary w4 r3 Chaudhry, The Myhts of The Market - PDF 1680126135
Summary w4 r3 Chaudhry, The Myhts of The Market - PDF 1680126135
VI. CONCLUSION
The subdiscipline of a development economics was based on powerful insights about the
economic challenges facing late developers. Increasingly, these insights were lost through the
wide acceptance of what Hirschman called the "mono-economics". Market economies cannot
exist without effective legal, regulatory, and extractive national institutions that have
jurisdiction over a given territory. Infirm regulatory and extractive institutions were critical in
fostering high levels of etatisme in late developers. This account highlighted the highly
political nature of economic organization. International capital flows prior to the 1980s
undermined the very national institutions necessary for the creation of national market
economies. Links between domestic economic institutions and the global economy reveal
why the numerous social, institutional and political prerequisites for market economies do not
exist. The globalization of the economy makes national economies permeable. superpower
rivalries no longer serve as a barrier to redrawing political borders. The speed and
thoroughness advocated by neoliberal reformers should be evaluated against the long-term
process of reconstruction. Neoclassical economics is silent on the issue of how networks of
self-regulating factor and commodity markets emerge. Neoclassical economics is particularly
ill-equipped to explore the complexities of market formation. No system of exchange
encapsules a code for social organization. The market embodies no telos and has no self-
contained blueprint on how societies should reconcile conflicts between individual and public
goods.