The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

206


INSTITUTIONS


MATTER


INSTITUTIONS IN ECONOMICS


S


tandard economics assumes
the existence of markets.
It also assumes that
governments have the policy
levers necessary to encourage
markets towards beneficial kinds of
trade, investment, and innovation.
However, institutional economists
go deeper—they search for the
origin of markets, their involvement

with the state, and the political
and social conditions that help
economic activity.
US economist Douglass North
defined institutions as the
“humanly devised constraints
that shape human interaction.”
These constraints are the “rules
of the game,” and appear in both
formal and informal guises.

Institutions are the laws, customs,
and traditions of a society.

“Bad” institutions
hamper economic
and social progress.

Individuals and firms work within
the bounds of these institutions
when they work, buy, and sell.

“Good” institutions
promote economic
and social progress.

Good institutions
matter.

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Society and the economy

KEY THINKER
Douglass North (1920 – )

BEFORE
1904 US economist Thorstein
Veblen argues for the primacy
of institutions in explanations
of economic performance.

1934 US economist John
Commons states that
economies are complex
webs of institutions and
divergent interests.

AFTER
1993 US economist Avner
Greif uses game theory
to analyze the historical
development of institutions
that allowed trade to develop.

2001 Turkish-US economist
Daron Acemog ̆lu explains
institutional differences
between countries in terms
of their colonial origins.
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