Bloomsbury Home
- Home
- ACADEMIC
- International Development
- Development Economics and Emerging Economies
- Public Supply and Demand
Public Supply and Demand
A Political Theory of Economies and Markets
Public Supply and Demand
A Political Theory of Economies and Markets
Payment for this pre-order will be taken when the item becomes available
- Delivery and returns info
-
Free US delivery on orders $35 or over
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
Description
Eminent political economists Ian Budge and Paul Whiteley make a forceful case for bringing the state back into economic planning for better economic and political outcomes. They do so primarily by calling attention to the shortcomings of axiomatic, neoclassical economic theorizing, which makes normative assumptions about how economic actors ought to behave without considering how they actually behave thanks largely to the influence of advertisers and politicians. Revisiting Adam Smith with this in mind, Budge and Whiteley offer original, alternative understandings of individual and collective decision-making; the difference between national economies and "the economy"; the state's role in the provision of public goods; the state's role in dealing with risks, uncertainties, and externalities such as climate change; and the very notion of "supply and demand," which they reconceive as supply-then-demand.
The end result is a more robust explanatory model of economics coupled with a normative case for the governance of public goods and markets. All this adds up to a major intervention into the question of how societies organize the extraction and allocation of resources to meet the needs of their constituents.
Table of Contents
Part I. The Political Configuration of Economies
1. Economic Science: Still the Prisoner of the State?
2. Collective Choice and Collective Action: Policy Making – Enforcement and Responsiveness
Part II. Responding to Needs
3. Private Markets and Collective Choice: Coping with Risk and Uncertainty
4. Coping with Anticipated Risk: Market and Government Responses to Climate Change
Part III. Meeting Preferences through Markets
5. Free-market Demand and Supply Revisited: Axiomatic Theories Confront Economic Realities
6. An Economic Theory of Democracy: Axiomatic Theories Confront Political Realities
Part IV. Responding to Preferences Through Democratic Processes
7. General Elections, Parties, and Voters
8. Policy Supply and Demand: Macro-level Responsiveness
9. Policy Supply and Demand: Micro-level Responsiveness through Thermostatic Adjustments
Part V. Back to Political Economy
10. Predictive versus Axiomatic Explanation
Product details

Published | Feb 05 2026 |
---|---|
Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 240 |
ISBN | 9781350512627 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
Dimensions | 9 x 6 inches |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |