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Inherent Vice: Minsky, Markomata, and the tendency of markets to undermine themselves

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  • MIROWSKI, PHILIP

Abstract

Most current explanations of the crisis which began in 2007/8 tend to search for scapegoats, in the format of behavioral flaws. Their treatment of ‘risk’ is an important signpost to where such theories go awry. This paper suggests a structural theory of the crisis, informed by Institutionalist themes. We insist there is an alternative to a neoclassical macroeconomics, in the guise of possible alternative heterodox microfoundations for Minsky's account of economic crises, beyond the Kaleckian markup model. The sketch is based upon elevation of some formal notions of computational complexity to pride of place, and characterization of crises as a collapse of complexity. It is an attempt to portray a market system evolving to a point of ‘inherent vice’: an endogenous development which by its very nature, cannot be tamed through conventional insurance or risk models.

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  • Mirowski, Philip, 2010. "Inherent Vice: Minsky, Markomata, and the tendency of markets to undermine themselves," Journal of Institutional Economics, Cambridge University Press, vol. 6(4), pages 415-443, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:cup:jinsec:v:6:y:2010:i:04:p:415-443_99
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    Cited by:

    1. Philip Mirowski, 2011. "The Spontaneous Methodology of Orthodoxy, and Other Economists’ Afflictions in the Great Recession," Chapters, in: John B. Davis & D. Wade Hands (ed.), The Elgar Companion to Recent Economic Methodology, chapter 20, Edward Elgar Publishing.
    2. Greg Hannsgen & Tai Young-Taft, 2015. "Inside Money in a Kaldor-Kalecki-Steindl Fiscal Policy Model: The Unit of Account, Inflation, Leverage, and Financial Fragility," Economics Working Paper Archive wp_839, Levy Economics Institute.
    3. Domenica Tropeano, 2016. "Hedging, Arbitrage, and the Financialization of Commodities Markets," International Journal of Political Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 45(3), pages 241-256, July.
    4. Juliet Johnson & Daniel Mügge & Leonard Seabrooke & Cornelia Woll & Ilene Grabel & Kevin Gallagher, 2013. "The future of international political economy," Post-Print hal-02186506, HAL.
    5. Bagrat Yerznkyan, 2012. "Institutional Economics At The Crossroads: A View From Russia," Montenegrin Journal of Economics, Economic Laboratory for Transition Research (ELIT), vol. 8(1), pages 27-45.

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