The markets are a powerful economic coordination mechanism. Even so, their limitations cannot, and should not, be ignored. The wide range of costs originating from business activities within the framework of capitalism and subsequently externalised or, more accurately, transferred to other agents or to society as a whole with no repercussions on the price mechanism, is one particularly striking example of these limitations. This article contrasts the different concepts of social costs existing in economics literature, ranging from the identification of the problem as a “market failure” to the more heterodox (and less well-known) concept of K. William Kapp, according to whom social costs are an intrinsic and inevitable problem within the ins...
The literature on varieties of capitalism advanced the idea of a \u201cSouthern European\u201d typol...
The paper deals with the lack of attention that many socially minded economists pay to social issue...
taxes might correct for market failures, theory cannot solve the problem without a detailed analysis...
The markets are a powerful economic coordination mechanism. Even so, their limitations cannot, and s...
The markets represent a powerful economic coordination mechanism. Even so, their limitations cannot,...
The aim of the paper is to assess the notion of social costs from an evolutionary institutionalist p...
© 2015 by Duke University Press. This article deals with the theory of social costs by K. William Ka...
Published online: 04 Jun 2018In the last few years, there has been a revival of interest in the work...
This book deals with the causes of the present crises but it claims that causes and policy implicati...
© 2020, © 2020, Journal of Economic Issues / Association for Evolutionary Economics. Abstract: This ...
In the early 1970s Wilfred Beckerman and K. William Kapp engaged in a serious dispute. Although it f...
International audienceThe extraordinary influence of The Problem of Social Cost" is now well acknowl...
This presentation analyzes the discourse on social costs, focusing on how neoliberal economists in t...
James Emile. Kapp (K. William) - The Social Costs of Private Enterprise.. In: Revue économique, volu...
Elsner, Wolfram / Frigato, Pietro / Ramazzotti, Paolo (eds.), Social Costs and Public Action in Mode...
The literature on varieties of capitalism advanced the idea of a \u201cSouthern European\u201d typol...
The paper deals with the lack of attention that many socially minded economists pay to social issue...
taxes might correct for market failures, theory cannot solve the problem without a detailed analysis...
The markets are a powerful economic coordination mechanism. Even so, their limitations cannot, and s...
The markets represent a powerful economic coordination mechanism. Even so, their limitations cannot,...
The aim of the paper is to assess the notion of social costs from an evolutionary institutionalist p...
© 2015 by Duke University Press. This article deals with the theory of social costs by K. William Ka...
Published online: 04 Jun 2018In the last few years, there has been a revival of interest in the work...
This book deals with the causes of the present crises but it claims that causes and policy implicati...
© 2020, © 2020, Journal of Economic Issues / Association for Evolutionary Economics. Abstract: This ...
In the early 1970s Wilfred Beckerman and K. William Kapp engaged in a serious dispute. Although it f...
International audienceThe extraordinary influence of The Problem of Social Cost" is now well acknowl...
This presentation analyzes the discourse on social costs, focusing on how neoliberal economists in t...
James Emile. Kapp (K. William) - The Social Costs of Private Enterprise.. In: Revue économique, volu...
Elsner, Wolfram / Frigato, Pietro / Ramazzotti, Paolo (eds.), Social Costs and Public Action in Mode...
The literature on varieties of capitalism advanced the idea of a \u201cSouthern European\u201d typol...
The paper deals with the lack of attention that many socially minded economists pay to social issue...
taxes might correct for market failures, theory cannot solve the problem without a detailed analysis...