Political economy Lecture 1 An introduction Jan Fałkowski Faculty of Economic Sciences, University of Warsaw February-June 2010.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright © 2004 South-Western 22 Frontiers of Microeconomics.
Advertisements

Introduction to Political Economy of Capitalism First things first….
© 2007 Thomson South-Western. ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION A difference in access to relevant knowledge is called information asymmetry.
Political Culture and Socialization (System Level)
Social Choice Carmen Pasca and John Hey. What is this picture?
1 Microeconomics Lecture 1 Institute of Economic Theories - University of Miskolc Mónika Kis-Orloczki Assistant lecturer
19.0 Conclusion Debate over intervention vs. non-intervention goes back two hundred years Jean-Baptiste Say (1803) – market system can and does.
Fundamentals of Political Science Dr. Sujian Guo Professor of Political Science San Francisco State Unversity
SOCIOLOGY Chapter 1: The Sociological Point of View
Institutions and their role in shaping European Security
Institute of Economics 520 G. Labour Economics Prof. Dr. Thomas Beißinger 
Where Are We Now? Get Out The Map
Research Methodology for Applied Economics
Core Issues in Comparative Politics (PO233) Module Director: Dr. Renske Doorenspleet Associate Professor in Comparative Politics director Centre for Studies.
Political Science (Contemporary issues). concerns Many of the most important lessons that contemporary social science holds for contemporary political.
Nature of Politics Areas of Study in Political Science.
Econ 102 SY Lecture 1 What this course is all about June 10, 2008.
Last class: Today: Next class: Important date:
The Contemporary trends of social thought in west Countries Shanghai political and law institute.
Introduction to Political Economy: Theories and Practice
CDAE 254 Intermediate Microeconomics for Applied Economists Fall 2007.
Introducing Comparative Politics
Economics as Social Science Economic Methodology Lecture 2 Dominika Milczarek-Andrzejewska.
Researching the net-work of school (mathematics) education practices Paola Valero PhD course “Designing social learning systems in a globalized world:
8 CHAPTER Public Sector Demand PUBLIC SECTOR ECONOMICS: The Role of Government in the American Economy Randall Holcombe.
Theme 1: Introduction. Politology. The principal notions of science.
De Bei ClaudiaComparative Politics – EPS. The origins and change of Electoral Institutions Duverger’s law: “The simple-majority single ballot system favours.
Fundamentals of Political Science Dr. Sujian Guo Professor of Political Science San Francisco State Unversity
Introductory Development Economics Rasmus Heltberg Lektor, Institute of Economics University of Copenhagen Course homepage:
Introduction to Economics Eco-101 Lecture # 01 Introduction to Economics and its important Aspects Instructor: Farhat Rashid.
The Methodenstreit between neoclassical and behavioural economics and its consequences Vladimir Avtonomov National Research University “Higher School of.
European Studies David Kereselidze European Studies Relatively new field, the origin of which was conditioned by the integration processes.
1. VISION School of Economics School of Economics To bring up a new generation of economists trained in a broad array of social sciences, enabling them.
Roadmap for Economics. What is Economics? The Social Science concerned with the efficient use of limited or scarce resources to achieve maximum satisfaction.
Q1. The politically relevant opinions held by ordinary citizens that they express openly.
Political economy Lecture 3 Economic growth & institutions Jan Fałkowski Faculty of Economic Sciences, University of Warsaw February-June 2010.
Class 5: Maximizing society’s sense of well being Economic theory models social behavior that achieves Pareto Optimum The key question: Is the social construct.
Chapter 2 “Comparing Political Systems” Comparison is the scientific study of politics Theories are developed on political processes.
Chapter 2: The Role of Economics
Economics: an introduction Growth Economics Roberto Pasca di Magliano 2015/2016.
Chapter 1 Introduction McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Political Economics Riccardo Puglisi Lecture 1 Content: The Political Economics Approach Methodological Tools Majoritarian Elections.
Wither institutions in economics? Jan Fałkowski MADE lecture,
WEEK 3 THE THEORY OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS. Vocabulary Focus Positivism is a philosophic system which considers that truth can be verified only by facts.
Development and Geopolitics in East Asia. The aim of this course is primarily to understand the rise of East Asia in the international system, focusing.
AMERICAN GOVERNMENT POWER AND PURPOSE, 8 th Edition by Theodore J. Lowi, Benjamin Ginsberg and Kenneth A. Shepsle Chapter 11. Political Parties.
PHILOSOPHY AS A SECOND ORDER DISCIPLINE
By Dr. Talat AnwarAdvisor Centre for Policy Studies, CIIT, Islamabad Centre for Policy Studies, CIIT, Islamabad
PUBLIC ECONOMICS КУРС ПО ВЫБОРУ (OPTIONAL COURSE).
Introduction to Introduction to Economics. The Nature and Method of Economics. Lecture 1 Beata Łopaciuk-Gonczaryk.
PHILOSOPHY AS A SECOND ORDER DISCIPLINE
Political Science and Geography (TR020)
The Student’s Companion to Social Policy
Objectives Notes #1 Students will:
Heterodox economics What is Heterodox Economics?
Chapter 1 The Sociological Point of View
Dr Michael Wycherley Director of BESS
Most Roads Lead to Rome, But Some Roads Lead to Lab City: Spatially Differentiated Paths to Economic Growth Synergy Session Presentation Memorial University,
Frontiers of Microeconomics
POLI 213 INTRODUCTION TO PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Political Science and Geography (TR020)
BESS – The Business, Economics and Social Studies Programme (TR081)
EDU5810 EDUCATIONAL POLICY AND PLANNING DR. RAMLI BIN BASRI
Political Ideology To be an effective citizen and voter, people need to be informed about Current Issues and how political groups represent those issues.
BESS – The Business, Economics and Social Studies Programme (TR081)
BESS – The Business, Economics and Social Studies Programme (TR081)
The neo-liberalism A thought that defenses the free capitalist system appearing in early 1930s and late in 1970s insisting on Private monopoly capitalism.
Political Science and Geography (TR020)
Frontiers of Microeconomics
Unit 1 – Perspectives Objective 1 Explain the development of sociology as a social science.  Objective 2 Compare the theoretical perspectives of functionalism,
Presentation transcript:

Political economy Lecture 1 An introduction Jan Fałkowski Faculty of Economic Sciences, University of Warsaw February-June 2010

2 Outline Basic information about the course General overview – Salient questions – Some historical background – Political economy nowadays

Basic information about the course Jan Fałkowski Office hours: fridays 13:30-14:30, room 401 Written examination You have to recieve positive mark for tutorials – Dr Katarzyna Metelska-Szaniawska, – Fridays, 11:30-13:05, room 104

General overview – aims of the course In general: Provide a broad introduction to current research in political economy More specifically: Try to highlight – the impact of politics on economic processes and outcomes, – and the reciprocal influence of economic conditions on political life Overview of the syllabus

General overview – salient questions Why do we observe such a variation in economic policies around the world/over time? Why and how institutional reform can be undertaken? What if we adopt the view that state has its own objective function/represent the interests of some groups in the society (landlords, workers, etc.)? What if we accept the notion that constitutions & democratic rules are themselves equilibrium outcomes?

General overview – historical background Precursor: Antoine de Montchretien 1615, Traite de l’economie politique Starting from late XVII th century (Adam Smith, David Ricardo) political economy synonymous with economics Closely related to philosophy Still influential in the beginning of XX th century – Fathers of neoclassical economics still writing books with ‘political economy’ in the title and teaching political economy (Menger, Marschall, Jevons, Pareto)

General overview – historical background Economics organising itself into fields in early XX th century – Political economy defined a separate field in 1950s – Anthony Downs (1957) „An Economic Theory of Democracy” – Kenneth Arrow (1951) „Social Choice and Individual Values” – Discussion of comparative economic systems (1930s and 1940s) O. Lange, F. A. von Hayek, J. Schumpeter – The Marxist project of social analysis ask your parents to name the most difficult/boring subject during their studies…

General overview – political economy nowadays What is political economy now? – Interesting mixture things that have too much politics to be economics, too much history to be politics, too much sociology to be history, and too much economics to be sociology – One of the most exciting and most lively field in economics (observe the future nobel prize winners in economics)

General overview – political economy nowadays In general: – Complementing the focus of welfare economics (optimal policies) with institution design and policy implementation – Strong microfoundations – Interdisciplinary approach – Number of assumptions from neoclassical economics rejected (fully rational agent, perfect information, etc.) – Importantly drawing from „insitutional approach”

General overview – political economy nowadays, theory Three separate pillars (Persson & Tabellini) – theory of macroeconomic policy rationality, micro-foundations, but naive politics – public choice agency, constitutions, interest groups, but naive methods – rational choice (political science) collective choice procedures, but naive approach to policy Gradual improvements on theoretical front: combining best of three approaches

General overview – political economy nowadays, empirics Early work suffered from two problems (P&T) – tests of theory not very precise – lack of institutional detail Gradual improvements on empirical front – more solid theoretical foundations – better data – concern with identifying causal effects: micro- econometrics – appreciation of findings in empirical political science

General overview – main actors Voters – Why do they vote/abstain? How do they vote? Politicians – Who chooses to become politicians? What motivation do they have to run for office? Parties – What is political market structure? What policy platforms do they offer? Who do they appeal to? Governments – How is it formed? What actions it undertakes?

General overview – main research fields Actions of governments as consequences of political forces enabling acquiring and maintaining power General equilibrium theory of political economy – All political variables endogenous, being outcomes of decisions of individuals political vars. – legislature, politicians (candidates), interest groups, governments, policies, constitutions

General overview – tutorials Broad overview of the political economy literature Discussing number of issues related to development economics, macroeconomics, welfare economics, public economics, international economics

Thank you for your attention & see you next week