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Do We Underestimate the Benefits of Cultural Competition?
Economic globalization has drawn fresh attention to cultural issues. The Uruguay Round of trade negotiations debated whether there should be a protectionist “cultural exception” for television and movies, as practiced by the French, Canadians, Brazilians, South Koreans, and Chinese to varying degrees. Governments around the world subsidize culture, in part to favor one national tradition over potential competitors. More generally, cultural questions are central to broader critiques of trade and globalization (Cowen, 2002). Current analyses, however, have neglected some insights from economics. We will suggest that market competition across cultures is desirable and favors relevant notions of diversity. An underlying theme is that individuals hold unjustified prejudices—or, in economic jargon, “systematically biased beliefs”—about globalization.
Ski-Lift Pricing with Applications to Labor and Other Markets: Comment
Inconsistent Equilibrium Constructs: The Evenly Rotating Economy of Mises and Rothbard
The Development of the New Monetary Economics
The Development of the New Monetary Economics
This paper looks into the history of economic thought to examine the forerunners of the "new monetary economics." This approach emphasizes the role of regulations on private financial intermediation in determining the particular institutional arrangements that contemporary monetary theory treats as data. The "new view" investigates the possibility that under laissez-faire the unit of account and means of payment, traditionally bundled together in the item called "money," may become separated. The earlier writers who share this perspective have been overlooked by historians of economic thought as well as by recent contributors to the new monetary economics. Many of the insights of these theorists are relevant to modern monetary theory. Copyright 1987 by University of Chicago Press.
Inconsistent Equilibrium Constructs: The Evenly Rotating Economy of Mises and Rothbard
The Industrial Organization of Online Education
Online education has flexibility and cost advantages over in-class teaching and these advantages will grow with improvements in information technology. We consider likely market structures given that the quality aspects of online education exhibit endogenous fixed costs. Concentration in the market for courses could be high, as it is currently in the market for textbooks. The not-for-profit sector will exhibit lower costs, lower concentration, and possibly zero price.