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l y ,roduced with the permission of International Social Science Review, @1984, v. 59, winter i..a4: 59-60. Lester C. Thurow. Dangerous Currents: The State of Economics, New York: Random House. 1983. pp. xix + 247. $16.95. ‘ Fifty years ago the United States was in the throes of the Great Depression. The unemployment rate was 25 percent and the price level was falling. Searching
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What needs to be done. Thurow tells us in the last chapter. is a reexamination and a restructuring of the foundations of economics. in so doing economists must modify. if not relinquish. the concept of homo economicus-—the economic man who is always a utility maximizer. “To reconstruct a theory of economic behavior. a more complex vision of the interaction between society and its citizens is paramount" (p. 222). Economists. Thurow is saying. must deal with (not his terms) homo socio/ogicus and homo ps_vchologz'cu.s rather than exclusively with homo econmnicus. Toward this end. they would do well to cross over into the fields of sociology and psychology and come up with economic theories which describe economic behavior of John and Sally Doe rather than some unreal homo economi~ ms. is Dangerous Cim-ems worth reading? The answer is yes. if you do not mind a bit of carping and warmed over criticism of the way economists theorize. profess. and practice whatever it is they do. The answer is no. ifyou are searching for more challenging criticism of classical economic theory and its recent outcroppings. If you read the book and have a feeling of doja vu. try to remember which of Veblen's books youhave read. Veblen's The Flare of Science in Modern Cii'ili:an'on- ( l9l9) put under scrutiny some of the same assumptions of classical economics that so bother Thurow. In this reviewer's judgment. Veblen did it with more finesse. Dtmgcrous CllI‘I'C’HIS. on the other hand. is more readable. and belongs in the “light reading" section of your economics library. Edward R. Sopiarz
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with the permission of Fortune, ©1984, v. 109, May 14, 3!" r _ 3' . ‘)9 ‘ ‘ ‘ v’ g. “ i 0,. a , _ v - .} ,' .. to \ , I . ‘ .4 , ~ . Economist Paul Craig R0 1984: 221, 222. I berts HVIS JDV lH““(lIlVM CHIN
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rvvwuav ornu mm ouo S By Milton and Rose Friedman Harcoun Brace Jovanovich - 1829p - $10.95 THE FRIEDMAN REMEDY ms FRIEDMANS: A conssnvrnvn nsvournon BY ooNs1'rn.moN.u. AMENDMENT FORWASIIIIIGTOIPS PARALYSIS strong streak of populism has al- Aways run through Milton Fried- man's brand of conservatism, just as it has in the conservatism of President Ronald Reagan. In this popu- list
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(Nobel Frize in Economics, 1976) and David Meiselman (Professor of Economics) think that restoring incentives takes time and should be part of a long-term program. Fur- thermore, Friedman disagrees =-that Reproduced with the permission of Business Horizons, ©1984, Nov.-Dec- 1983: 81'82-
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/November-December 1983 even to large tax cuts. —i These issues about the timing morflarisxs’ and supply-Sidtffi and tactics of supply—side eco- think ‘hm the), would bc wise to I nomics are only part of the general spend somc time with this debates. Of great concern to those book. [:3 atthe conference was the conduct of monetary policy. Frank Morris (President of the Atlanta Fed) and Alan Reynolds (Chief Economist
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to those who are horrified by the inflexibil- ity of government by constitutional amendment. But to them, their book pre- sents an obvious and useful challenge: If you don’t buy its ideas, come up with a better way of putting economic policy back on the right track. To this reviewer, the Friedmans’ most persuasive case is for a constitutional amendment to reform the tax system. The 16th Amendment, ratified
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