Suchergebnisse
Filter
4 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Ranking economic performance and efficiency in the global market: emerging research and opportunities
In: Advances in finance, accounting, and economics (AFAE) book series
In: Research insights
"This book ranks all world countries according to their economic efficiency. Some of the rankings challenge existing conceptions. The second purpose is normative, furnishing specific insights into the determinants of economic efficiency. The emphasis is on this second objective. The analysis explores how countries can reduce their jurisdictional footprints to the end of improving their economic efficiency."
On the problem of scale: Spinozistic sovereignty as the logical foundation of constitutional economics
In: The journal of philosophical economics: reflections on economic and social issues, Band VII Issue 1, Heft Articles
ISSN: 1844-8208
This paper argues that sovereignty, as envisaged by Spinoza, is the logical foundation of constitutional economics. Constitutional constructs such as sovereignty weave an evolutionary dialectic between different organizational scales (the local, national, and global). This dialectic continues to wreak havoc at the local scale, and can be interrupted only through explicit constitutional constraints on the size of jurisdictions. The paper argues for more emphasis on constitutional orders in the spirit of Spinoza's understanding of sovereignty. This entails preference for federal polities in which sovereignty is shared between different cities rather states where once capital cities dominate.
On the problem of scale: Spinozistic sovereignty as the logical foundation of constitutional economics
International audience ; This paper argues that sovereignty, as envisaged by Spinoza, is the logical foundation of constitutional economics. Constitutional constructs such as sovereignty weave an evolutionary dialectic between different organizational scales (the local, national, and global). This dialectic continues to wreak havoc at the local scale, and can be interrupted only through explicit constitutional constraints on the size of jurisdictions. The paper argues for more emphasis on constitutional orders in the spirit of Spinoza's understanding of sovereignty. This entails preference for federal polities in which sovereignty is shared between different cities rather states where once capital cities dominate.
BASE