Transcript Slide 1

Liberal Theories of
Political Economy
How does Politics constrain economic
choices?
Does “Big Oil” successfully lobby to halt development of
alternative energy sources?
and how do economic forces (markets, decisions of individual
firms) Motivate and constrain political choices…..
• Like voting behavior
• Or what economic policies governments
pursue,
What does the Liberal Theory of Political
Economy say about the “proper” relationship
between economic forces and politics?
According to Liberal Theory Who exercises
Power?
• Interest Groups
• Political Parties
• The Government
Interest Groups
Political Parties
States/Governments
• What is a state?
• States have Three Characteristics
– Institutions rule over territory
– Territory has people Living on it
– Power over the people in the territory
Sovereignty
• Over People in their territory (citizens)
• In the International System
The Question for Theories of Political
Economy
• What is the proper and appropriate
relationship between politics and economics,
power and wealth, interest groups, political
parties, and governments in shaping economic
policy, the state and the market?
• Answer depends on Goals and Assumptions
• Goals and Assumptions are part of theory
What is Theory?
• Theory should explain and predict.
• They should assist in reaching goals
• Theories are arguments based on assumptions
– Some assumptions about human nature
– Some assumptions about institutions
– Some assumptions about values/goals
Is there anything objective about this?
Liberalism
• Core commitment: Freedom
• Historically liberals were activists, fighting for
freedom
• They built institutions of Freedom
Political Liberalism
• The goals of Liberal political institutions
• What they must do to preserve freedom
Economic Liberalism
• Assumptions
– Individuals desire freedom above everything
– Economic actors are rational
– Free, rational actors naturally create markets
• The model
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The market
Non-coerced Exchange
Private Property
Division of Labor
Markets clear through supply, demand, and price
• Goals and Effects if the model is followed
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Efficiency
Growth
Welfare
Peach
Example: A Free Market for Drugs
Some downsides that Liberal Theory
tolerates
• Markets don’t ensure the same economic
growth for everyone
• inequalities in income and wealth are likely
• Inequality is likely to be tolerated in private
economic relations
• because the growth will make everyone better
off even if there is inequality
Let’s talk more about markets
• Political actors pursue power, markets create
wealth
• Many different markets acting together
• For markets to work properly, barriers to markets
must be removed
• Markets need to be governed, but minimally
• States must be small but strong enough to
protect the market from those who would
destroy it
• But States and markets have different purposes.
Markets undermine state sovereignty
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They can reduce the functions of the state
They can reduce state power
They don’t recognize territorial boundaries
They destabilize national society
The Business Cycle
•Prosperity
•Transition
•Trough
•Recovery
Casino Economy
Deregulation and corruption
Follow the crisis….
• 3. Deregulation of financial markets
• 4. Easy money 
• easy mortgages as bets on  in housing prices +
• No regulation/ oversight: Run of CDOs and derivatives + borrowing to buy
them (betting on  in value) + rating fraud + easy insurance (AIG)  highly
leveraged banks

Housing supply overwhelms demand  housing prices fall + mortgage
defaults 
CDOs lose value + Bank stock prices fall  credit drys up  Begin the bailout
 (hopefully) more credit  (hopefully) save businesses and jobs 
(hopefully) economic growth
Some confusions
• Why are liberals opposed to conservatives?
– Social conservatives – restrict individual freedom
– Social liberals – increase individual freedom
– Political conservatives—increase market freedom
– Economic conservatives—classical liberals
• Political Liberals– evolution of the term
“liberal”