Traditional theory assumes economies are linear systems
Traditional economic theory assumes economies are linear systems filled with rational actors who seek to optimize their situation.
Outputs reflect a sum of inputs, the system is closed, and if big change comes it comes as an external shock. The system's default state is equilibrium. The prevailing metaphor is a machine.

The traditional approach, in short, completely misunderstands human behavior and natural economic forces. The problem is that the traditional model is not an academic curiosity; it is the basis for an ideological story about the economy and government's role--and hat story has fueled policy making and has morphed into a selfishness-justifying conventional wisdom.

Even today, the debate between free marketeers and Keynesians unfolds on the terms of the market fundamentalists: government stimulus efforts are usually justifies as a way to restore equilibrium, an defend as regrettable deviations from government's naturally minimalist role.
Immediately related elementsHow this works
-
Gardens of Democracy »Gardens of Democracy
True Capitalism - We're All Better Off When We're All Better Off »True Capitalism - We're All Better Off When We're All Better Off
Radical inequality and radical economic dislocation causally linked »Radical inequality and radical economic dislocation causally linked
Traditional theory assumes economies are linear systems
+Commentaires (0)
+Citations (0)
+About