1st Edition

The Values of Economics An Aristotelian Perspective

By Irene van Staveren Copyright 2001
    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    In his Ethics, Aristotle argued that human beings try to further a variety of values by balancing them, stating that people try to find a middle road between excess and deficiency. The author develops and applies this idea to the values of economics, arguing that in the economy; freedom, justice and care are also balanced to further ends with scarce means. Freedom is furthered through market exchange, justice through a redistributive role of the state, and care through mutual gifts of labour and sharing of resources in the economy.
    The book argues that economics is, and has always been, about human values, which guide, enable, constrain and change economic behaviour.

    1. The Missing Ethical Capabilities of Rational Economic Man  2. Paradoxes of Value  3. Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite  4. Beyond the Highway of Modern Economics  5. Hypotheses on Economic Role Combination  6. Toward an Aristotelian Economics  7. Institutional Mediation Between Value Domains

    Biography

    Irene van Staveren

    '[Van Staveren's] discussion on the value domain of the care economy and its interactions with and interdependece to justice and freedom is unparalleled.  This book will be of great value to those interested in understanding and probing the ethical dimensions of economic rationality, as well as those interested in how institutions mediate the roles of women in the three economic value domains.' - Journal of Feminist Economics