sábado, 16 de janeiro de 2016

A Grande Estagnação

Why The Great Stagnation Thesis is the Most Subversive Libertarian Argument of Our Age

|Peter Boettke|

Tyler Cowen caused quite a stir with his e-book, The Great Stagnation.  In properly assessing his work it is important to state explicitly what his argument actually is.  Median real income has stagnated since 1980, and the reason is that the rate of technological advance has slowed.  Moreover, the technological advances that have taken place with such rapidity in recent history have improved well-being, but not in ways that are easily measured in real income statistics.
Critics of Cowen more often than not miss the mark when they focus on the wild improvements in our real income due to quality improvements (e.g., cars that routinely go over 100,000 miles) and lower real prices (e.g., the amount of time required to acquire the inferior version of yesterday’s similar commodities).  Cowen does not deny this.  Nor does Cowen deny that millions of people were made better off with the collapse of communism, the relative freeing of the economies in China and India, and the integration into the global economy of the peoples of Africa and Latin America.  Readers of The Great Stagnation should be continually reminded that they are reading the author of In Praise of Commercial Culture and Creative Destruction.  Cowen is a cultural optimist, a champion of the free trade in ideas, goods, services and all artifacts of mankind.  But he is also an economic realist in the age of economic illusion.
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