History of Thought & Public Choice
EC 801 (Ph.D.)
Tuesday 4:30pm-7:10pm, Sawyer 1122
Final Exam December 15th 5:40pm-7:30pm
Dr. Benjamin Powell
Department of Economics
bpowell@suffolk.edu (best way to reach me)
617-573-8023
http://mail.beaconhill.org/~bpowell/
Office Hours: Tuesday and Wednesday 2pm-3:30pm and by appointment
This course combines a survey of the history of economic thought with an introduction to graduate level public choice research. As such, it is impossible to fully cover many of the details of the history of all economic thought. So this course focuses on the history of political economy with an emphasis on the development of ideas that still have relevance to a modern applied public choice research program. At the conclusion of the course students should have a broad understanding of the main thrust of the modern public choice research program as well as the history of where many of those ideas originated.
Students enrolled in this course intend to become professional economists. Professional economists not only consume and understand the knowledge other economists produce but they also take that foundation and build new knowledge for others through their own research. In addition to teaching the formal material in this course an emphasis will be placed on learning how to become a professional economist yourself. We’ll focus on teaching you how to “see” research ideas through the use of the readings in this course and students will be expected to produce a research paper of their own by the end of the semester.
Grading:
Midterm: 20%
Final Exam: 35%
Research Paper & Presentation: 35%
Participation: 10%
Books:
Adam Smith The Wealth of Nations
F.A. Hayek Individualism and Economic Order
Dennis Mueller Public Choice III
Mancur Olson Power and Prosperity
Bryan
Caplan Myth of the Rational Voter
James Buchanan and Richard Wagner Democracy in Deficit
F.A. Hayek A Tiger By the Tail
Course Outline
1. Scottish Enlightenment
Smith, Adam (1776) An
Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of
Nations.
Smith, Adam (1982 reprint) Lectures on Jurisprudence. (Handout pp. 331-339 and 577-
579).
Smith,
(1): 2-19.
Evensky, Jerry (2005) “Adam Smith’s theory of Moral Sentiments: On Morals and Why
They Matter to a Liberal Society of
Free People and Free Markets.” Journal of
Economic Perspectives 19 (3): 109-130.
Boulding, Kenneth (1971) “After Samuelson, Who Needs Adam
Smith?”
History of
Political Economy 3(2): 255-237.
2. Keynes and Hayek on Business Cycles
Keynes, John Maynard (1936) The General Theory of Employment Interest and Money.
Preface, Chapter 1, and Chapter 12.
Hayek, F.A. Monetary Theory and the Trade Cycle. Chapters 3 and 4.
Caldwell, Bruce (1995) Contra
Keynes and
Chapter 1, Hayek “The Economics of
the 1930s as Seen from
Garrison, Roger (2001) Time and Money: The Macroeconomics of Capital Structure.
Chapters 1, 3, and 4.
3. The Public
Choice Legacy of Keynesian Economics
Buchanan, James, and Richard Wagner (1977, 2000) Democracy in Deficit: The Political
Legacy
of Lord Keynes.
Hayek, F.A. (1972) A Tiger By the Tail: The Keynesian Legacy of Inflation. Available
for purchase at: http://mises.org/store/Tiger-by-the-Tail-A-P582.aspx
Keynes, John Maynard (1936) The General Theory of Employment Interest and Money.
“Concluding Notes on the Social Philosophy Towards Which the General Theory
Might Lead.”
4. Calculation Debate
Mises, Ludwig Von. (1920)
“Economic Calculation in the
Available at www.mises.org
Hayek, F.A. (1948) Individualism and Economic Order. Chapters 4, 7, 8, 9.
Lerner, Abba (1934) “Economic Theory and Socialist
Economy.” The Review of
Economic Studies. October: 51-61.
Lerner, Abba (1937) “Statics and Dynamics in Socialist
Economics.” The Economic
Journal 47 (186): 253-270.
Lerner, Abba (1938) “Theory and Practice in Socialist
Economics.” The Review of
Economic Studies 6 (1): 71-75.
5. Methodology
Point of View. Pp. 146-185
Buchanan, James (1964) “What should Economists Do?” Southern Economics Journal
30: 213-222.
Rothbard,
Journal 23 (3): 314-320.
Becker, Gary, (1976) “The Economic Approach to Human
Behavior.” From The
Economic Approach to Human Behavior. Pp. 3-14.
Friedman,
Positive Economics. Pp. 153-184.
Samuelson, Paul (1952) “Economic Theory and Mathematics – An Appraisal.”
American Economic Review 42 (2): 56-66.
Rothbard,
Foundations of Modern Austrian Economics. Pp. 89-111.
MIDTERM EXAM OCTOBER 13TH
6. Foundations of Public Choice
Buchanan, James (1979) “Politics Without Romance: A Sketch of Positive Public Choice
Theory and It’s Normative
Implications.” Handout from The Collected Works of
James Buchanan Vol. 1.
Tullock, Gordon (2004) “Economic Imperialism,” “Public Choice,” and “Public Choice
What I Hope for the Next Twenty Five Years.” Handouts from The Collected Works of Gordon Tullock Vol. 1.
Buchanan, James (1986) “The Constitution of Economic Policy” Nobel Prize Lecture.
Available at: http://nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/economics/laureates/1986/buchanan-lecture.html
Mueller, Dennis (2003) Public Choice III. Chapter 1.
7. Origins of the State
Mueller, Dennis (2003) Public Choice III. Chapter 2.
Olson, Mancur (2000) Power and Prosperity. Chapters 1, 2, 3.
Buchanan, James (1990) “The Domain of Constitutional
Economics.” Constitutional
Political Economy. Vol. 1 pp. 1-18.
Powell, Benjamin and Bart Wilson (2008) “An Experimental Investigation into
Hobbesian Jungles.” Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization. Vol. 66.
Rothbard,
8. Interest Groups and Rent Seeking
Olson, Mancur (2000) Power and Prosperity. Chapters 4 and 5.
Mueller, Dennis (2003) Public Choice III. Chapters 15 and 20.
Tullock, Gordon (1967) “The Welfare Costs of Tariffs,
Monopolies, and Theft.” Western
Economic Journal. Vol. 5. No. 3: 224-232.
Kruger, Anne (1974) “The Political Economy of the Rent
Seeking Society. American
Economic Review. Vol. 64. pp. 291-303.
Powell, Benjamin (2008) “The Rent Seeking Costs of Immigration Restrictions.”
Working Paper.
9. Bureaucracy
Mueller, Dennis (2003) Public Choice III. Chapter 16.
Niskanan, William (1975) “Bureaucrats and Politicians.” Journal
of Law and
Economics. Vol. 18. pp. 617-643.
Mises, Ludwig Von (1944) Bureaucracy. Chapters I, II, and III. Available online at:
http://mises.org/etexts/mises/bureaucracy.asp
10. Federalism
Mueller, Dennis (2003) Public Choice III. Chapter 10.
Buchanan, James (1965) “An Economic Theory of Clubs.” Economica. pp. 1-14.
Tiebout, Charles (1956) “A Pure Theory of Local Government
Expenditures.” Journal of
Political Economy. Vol. 64. No. 5. pp. 416-424.
Powell, Benjamin (2004) “Competition and Monopoly Power in Local Government: An
Extension of Caplan (2001).” Public Choice, Vol. 120. 2004.
Richard Wagner, “Self-governance, polycentricism and
federalism,” Journal of
Economic Behavior & Organization, 57 (2) 2005: 173-188.
Nozick, Robert (1974) Anarchy, State and Utopia. Book III.
11. Democratic Efficiency
Becker,
Political Influence.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 98 (3): 371-400.
Wittman, Donald (1989) “Why Democracies Produce Efficient Results.”
Journal of Political Economy 97 (6): 1395-1424.
12. Political Economy of Voter Irrationality
Caplan,
Menken, H.L. (1926) Notes on Democracy Chapter II.
13. Non Democratic
Governance
Mueller, Dennis (2003) Public Choice III. Chapter 18.
Olson, Mancur (2000) Power and Prosperity. Chapters 6, 7 and 8.
Powell, Benjamin, and Edward Stringham (2008) “Public Choice and the Economic
Analysis of Anarchy: A Survey.” Public Choice. Forthcoming.
Powell, Benjamin, Ryan Ford and Alex Nowrasteh (2008) “
Chaos or Improvement.” Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 67.
14. Research Presentations
Final Exam December
15th 5:40pm-7:30pm