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精品SM在线影片 alum is challenging sacred economic shibboleths

精品SM在线影片 alum is challenging sacred economic shibboleths

Nick Romeo鈥檚 鈥楾he Alternative鈥 uses real-world examples to push back on 鈥榰nempirical dogmas鈥 of modern economics


Following World War II, economists in the West began to compare their field to natural sciences, physics and chemistry, perpetuating a set of enduring ideas that slowly ossified into the rigid, pessimistic dogma of neoliberal capitalism.

Ideas such as the need for extremely high executive compensation; the inevitability of unemployment and insecure housing; and beliefs that people are inherently selfish, profit should always be maximized, private markets are superior to public ones, harmful externalities are a necessary byproduct of economic growth, and others flourished.

Nick Romeo

精品SM在线影片 alum Nick Romeo argued that modern economics is 鈥渕isunderstood as analogous to physics or chemistry, when it鈥檚 more properly located within political philosophy.鈥

鈥淭hese are unempirical dogmas that are treated as laws of the universe,鈥 says journalist, author and 精品SM在线影片 graduate Nick Romeo (MAClassics鈥14, MFAEngl鈥12), who teaches journalism at the University of California, Berkeley. Modern economics is 鈥渕isunderstood as analogous to physics or chemistry, when it鈥檚 more properly located within political philosophy.鈥

That technocratic approach to economics washes out critical ethical and political questions that are鈥攐r should be鈥攁t the center of the discipline, Romeo says. He notes that for most of history, economics was the province of political philosophy, examined and argued by such historical giants as Aristotle, John Stuart Mill, Adam Smith and John Maynard Keynes.

鈥淭hat is a much healthier and accurate way to understand the discipline. 鈥 Economists don鈥檛 have a monopoly on insight, and political philosophy is potentially in a better position to be more insightful,鈥 he says.

Diverse solutions

Romeo has been honing his own intellectual chops for years, first as an undergraduate at Northwestern University and later as a graduate student at 精品SM在线影片. He鈥檚 also spent years living in Greece with his wife, Grace Erny, MA Classics, 2014, an archaeologist he met in Boulder. He鈥檚 also become a nationally respected writer, publishing in such publications at The Atlantic, The New Yorker, Rolling Stone and The New York Times

In his new book, 鈥溾 (PublicAffairs), he explores real-world examples from around the globe that challenge 鈥渟ome of the sacred shibboleths and economic dogmas of neoliberal capitalism.鈥

鈥淭he eight cases studies in 鈥楾he Alternative鈥 present diverse solutions to the problems of paltry wages, rampant unemployment, unstable housing and exploitative labor practices,鈥 according to a in The Washington Post, calling it 鈥渁 brisk and sensible book that details bold and ingenious proposals in measured tones.鈥

The first chapter zeroes in on the problem of economics education, which was almost exclusively taught through unchallenged dogma until recent decades.

鈥淭he American economist Paul Samuelson once  said, 鈥業 don鈥檛 care who writes a nation鈥檚 laws, as long as I get to write the economic textbooks,鈥欌 Romeo says. 鈥淲e need to change economics education and what counts as cultural 鈥榗ommon sense.鈥欌

Book cover for 'The Alternative'

Nick Romeo's The Alternative explores real-world examples from around the globe that challenge 鈥渟ome of the sacred shibboleths and economic dogmas of neoliberal capitalism.鈥

He goes on to examine a job-guarantee program in Austria; climate-focused budgeting in Norway; the Well-Paid Maids cleaning service in Washington, D.C., which pays its employees $22 an hour and provides generous paid time off and benefits; a cooperative in Spain that restricts executive compensation to no more than six times that of workers and gives every worker a vote; and other examples of innovative, progressive capitalism.

鈥淓verything I am describing already exists. Many times, these problems are presented as an inevitable feature of the universe, or certainly the American economy, that we can鈥檛 get rid of without entirely dismantling capitalism and adopting communism,鈥 Romeo says.

Trying new ideas

While he recognizes traditional critiques of such efforts鈥攖hey can鈥檛 scale, for instance鈥攈e suggests that that hasn鈥檛 been tried, and stranger things have happened.

鈥淢any things we take for granted today once seemed really farfetched and controversial鈥攖he 40-hour work week, eliminating child labor, occupational and environmental legislation, worker safety rules,鈥 he says.

When hard-core libertarians argue against such widely accepted adaptations, and even pass laws to undermine them, such as the recent loosening of child-labor laws in some states, they鈥檙e not making a good-faith argument, Romeo says.

鈥淚 think if you asked a lot of those folks if they would like to have their kids work in dangerous factories or live in a town where the water is unsafe, it would be hard to find someone truly committed to those views when they are directly impacted,鈥 he says.

Romeo continues to write for The New Yorker and other publications on a wide variety of subjects and teach at Berkeley. He says he鈥檚 鈥渄eveloping a few ideas鈥 for his next book.

During his time at 精品SM在线影片, Romeo was particularly impressed with the Herbst Program for Engineering, Ethics and Society, which 鈥渆ngages students with the essential questions of human existence, and links those issues with the ethical practices of science and engineering,鈥 noting the work of and .

鈥淚t鈥檚 a hidden gem, almost like a shadow department, and the teachers are excellent,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey have to interact with engineers, always bringing their best. They can鈥檛 assume everybody is interested, so they have to know a good way to reach them.鈥

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ntamj5A46jU]

 


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