Preventing Markets from Self-Destruction: The Quality of Government Factor
Abstract
Four interrelated arguments are presented to form a theory about the relation between
the logic of markets, social efficiency and the quality of government. The first is that
competitive markets with a certain set of characteristics are the most efficient
organizational form for creating a utilitarian based economic efficiency for the
production of most goods and services. The second argument is that in order to reach
this utilitarian based social efficiency, markets need large and complicated set of
institutions, formal as well as informal. Since such institutions will in the long run
make all market agents better off, they are labelled efficient institutions. The third
argument is that it is unlikely that such institutions will be created endogenously by
market agents. Moreover, if such institutions have been created, we should expect
market agents to try to destroy them. Based on insights from various approaches
(institutional economics and research on neo-corporatism, clientilism, and corruption)
there is no reason to expect that efficient institutions will evolve by any selection
mechanism that is generated from the sum of agency that exists in markets. The
conclusion reached is that if left to themselves, markets are inherently selfdestructive.
The fourth argument is that markets can only reach social efficiency if the
agents that reproduce the necessary efficient type of institutions act according to a
logic that is different from the logic that market agents use when operating in the
market. This operational logic is the ethical dimensions of what should count as
quality of government.
Link to web site
http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1350/1350688_2009_2_rothstein.pdf
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Date
2009-01Author
Rothstein, Bo
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2009:02
Language
eng