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Meet the New Normal, Same as the Old Normal: The State-Market Balance and Economic Policy Debates after the Pandemic

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  • Kanbur, Ravi

Abstract

This paper considers and assesses the concept of social externalities through human interdependence, in relation to the economic analysis of externalities in the tradition of Pigou and Arrow, including the analysis of the commons. It argues that there are limits to economic analysis. Our proposal is to enlarge the perspective and start thinking about a broader framework in which any pattern of influence of an agent or a group of agents over a third party, which is not mediated by any economic, social, or psychological mechanism guaranteeing the alignment of the marginal net private benefit with marginal net social benefit, can be attached the “externality” label and be scrutinized for the likely negative consequences that result from the divergence. These consequences may be significant given the many interactions between the social and economic realms, and the scope for spillovers and feedback loops to emerge. The paper also establishes a tentative and probably incomplete list of possible internalizing mechanisms for externalities under this broader framework, which includes: pricing and monetary incentives; altruism and solidarity; moral norms; reciprocity and mutual monitoring; centralized cooperative decision-making; and merger. There are clear reasons why the pricing mechanism is not appropriate in some cases. A more difficult question to answer is what factors determine which of the mechanisms is the appropriate one to rely on in a given sphere of relations and activities. The object of the paper is to encourage research and contributions from all the relevant disciplines of social sciences on the pervasive human interdependence that the notion of social externalities tries to capture.

Suggested Citation

  • Kanbur, Ravi, 2020. "Meet the New Normal, Same as the Old Normal: The State-Market Balance and Economic Policy Debates after the Pandemic," Applied Economics and Policy Working Paper Series 309989, Cornell University, Department of Applied Economics and Management.
  • Handle: RePEc:ags:cuaepw:309989
    DOI: 10.22004/ag.econ.309989
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    Financial Economics;

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