Institutional Economics

Front Cover
Routledge, 2009 - Business & Economics - 94 pages
The book is an introduction to institutional economics, following the history of different trends in this field since the early 20th century until the present day. It concentrates on influent authors in the main schools of institutional economics : american institutional economics as the original tradition, the austrian school, new institutional economics, and some contemporary european authors.Institutional economics is defined as economic thought that considers institutions to be relevant for economic theory, and consequently criticizes the neoclassical mainstream for having pushed them out of the discipline of economics ; it deals specially with the nature, the origin, the change of institutions, and their effects on economic performance. It is a family of different theories that were initially influential in economics, then lost much of their weight in the middle half of the 20th century, and eventually recovered significant creative vitality and impact in the last twenty years. The book puts the recent developments in historical perspective by showing how important themes like the importance of habits, the role of formal and informal rules, the relation of organizations and institutions, the hierarchy and complementarity of institutions, the evolutionary character of institutional change, have been explored by various authors or schools ; it introduces novel concepts of contemporary research.

About the author (2009)

Bernard Chavance is Professor of Economics at the University Paris Diderot, France. He has published several books on comparative economic systems and institutions, particularly on socialist systems and post-socialist transformation. His book Economic reforms in the East: From the 1950s to the 1990s (1992, Nathan) has been translated into English (US), Russian, Japanese and Chinese.