The Ethics of Capitalism: An Introduction

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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The Ethics of Capitalism: An Introduction

نام کتاب : The Ethics of Capitalism: An Introduction
ویرایش : 1
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : اخلاق سرمایه داری: مقدمه
سری :
نویسندگان : ,
ناشر : Oxford University Press
سال نشر : 2020
تعداد صفحات : 270
ISBN (شابک) : 0190096217 , 9780190096212
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 2 مگابایت



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Contents
Preface for Students
Preface for Instructors
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction: What Is This Book about?
1. Everyone Hates Capitalism?
2. What Is Capitalism?
3. What Are the Alternatives to Capitalism?
4. The “Ethics of Capitalism”: An Oxymoron?
Conclusions
Study Questions
2. Capitalism Seemed Like a Good Idea at the Time: The Rise and Fall (and Resurrection?) of Political Economy
1. 1770– 1868: The “Golden Age” of Political Economy
2. The “Fragmented Age:” Economics and Political Philosophy in the 20th Century
3. The Idea of Economic Justice
Conclusions
Study Questions
Further Reading
3. Getting Out of Feudalism— and Staying Out!
1. Feudalism and Capitalism
2. Great Escapes: Australian Convicts, American Radicals, and Other Heroes
3. Signs of a Revival of Feudalism?
4. Inherited Wealth and the Return of the “Rentier”
5. Big Business and Labor Market Domination
Conclusions
Study Questions
Further Reading
4. Market Order and Market Failure
1. Spontaneous Orders and Why They Matter
2. Prices and Information
3. Can Markets Fail?
4. Markets Behaving Badly
A. Price Gouging
B. Positional Goods
C. Public Goods
5. Market Failure or Government Failure?
Conclusions
Study Questions
Further Reading
5. So Why Not Socialism?
1. The Century of Socialism
2. What Is Socialism?
3. Types of Socialism
A. “Utopian” Socialism
B. Anarchism
C. Marxism
4. Market Socialism
5. Problems with Socialism
6. Ideals and Reality
7. Ethical Socialism
Conclusions
Study Questions
Further Reading
6. Low Wages and Lousy Jobs
1. The Old Stories: Malthus, Mill, and Competition among the Unskilled
2. What Makes a Lousy Job Lousy?
3. Is Alienated Labor Underrated?
3. Exploitation— Not Getting Out What You Put In
4. Exploitation— Alternatives to Marx
5. The New Story: Runaway Incomes at the Top
Conclusions
Study Questions
Further Reading
7. The Welfare State and Its Rivals
1. Labor Markets and the Minimum Wage
2. The Classic Welfare State
3. Subsidized Idleness or Empowerment for the Masses? The Case for Universal Basic Income
4. Prevention Is Better Than Cure? Property- Owning Democracy
5. Meritocracy
6. Comparing Systems
Conclusions
Study Questions
Further Reading
8. We Are the World; or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Global Trade
1. Globalization— The New Common Enemy?
2. Homo Mercator
3. Why Do We Trade Anyway?
4. The British Empire and the Persistence of Pseudo- Trade
5. The Old Skepticism: Mercantilism and Why the British Empire Was Actually Bad for the British
6. The New Skepticism: Populism in the 21st Century
7. Trade Justice in the 21st Century
8. If Trade Isn’t the Enemy, Then What (or Who) Is?
A. Protectionism and Subsidizing Failing Industries
B. Mobility of Capital and Its Impact on Taxation
C. Automation
Conclusions
Study Questions
Further Reading
9. Keeping Up with the Joneses (and the Kardashians): Positional Goods and Wars of All against All
1. We Can’t All Be Better Than Average
2. Zero Sum versus Positive Sum
3. Capitalism’s Great Disappointment?
4. Arms Races, Good and Bad
5. Peace Treaties and Finish Lines
Conclusions
Study Questions
Further Reading
10. Why Are We Still Working So Hard?
1. Keynes and the 15- Hour Week
2. What Jobs Are Machines “Stealing” and How?
3. More on Machine Misbehavior
4. The (Moral) Importance of Leisure Time
5. The End of Work?
Conclusions
Study Questions
Further Reading
11. Do Markets Wreck the Planet?
1. Stories of Destruction
A. Markets Aren’t the Only Culprits
B. Resources Often Get Consumed More Readily Than Conserved
C. Resources Aren’t Intrinsically Limited
2. Why Is the Environment So Vulnerable? Collective Action Problems and the Distribution of Incentives
A. Prevention
B. Alleviation
3. If It Ain’t Broke Don’t Sell It? Planned Obsolescence
4. Who Wants to Shoot a Rhino? Markets and Conservation
Conclusions
Study Questions
Further Reading
12. Boldly Going Where No Market Has Gone Before— Should Some Things Not Be for Sale?
1. Kidneys, Used Underwear, and Tossed Dwarfs: Intuitive Discomfort about Commodification
2. The Moral Downsides of Prohibition
3. Are Some Things “Beyond Price”?
4. Markets as Hierarchy Reinforcers
5. Maybe It’s Just All Too Much? Privacy and the Need for (Any Kind of) Market- Free Zone
Conclusions
Study Questions
Further Reading
References
Index




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