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Course Title History of economic Thought Course Level L3 / M1 Graduate / Undergraduate Domain Management Language English Nb. Face to Face Hours 36 (3hrs. sessions) plus 1 exam of 3 hours for a total of 12 classes E-learning Support My course No ECTS 6 Maximum number of 55 students Course Title History of economic Thought Professor Jan Horst Keppler Contact Information Jan Horst Keppler, mail: jan-horst.keppler@dauphine.fr, Université Paris-Dauphine, tel.: 01 44 05 45 13, mobile: 06 77 81 37 46. Grading Final Exam (control of acquired notions, some multiple choice) 50 % Written Assignment 50% (the assigned papers can be prepared individually or in groups of two or three; the list of possible topics is attached below). The grade for the paper includes class attendance. Except for students with special exemptions, more than two unmotivated absences can lead to deductions. Language English Prerequisites Basic knowledge of micro- and macroeconomics is desirable but not a must for students willing to familiarise themselves with a few key concepts during class. Objective The class aims to familiarise students with the main currents in the history of economic thought embodied by their most important theorists from Aristotle to Keynes. Students having taken the class should retain, in particular, the key features of the main economic bodies of thought and their actual or potential relevance to major historical or current economic questions. Learning Outcomes Knowledge of the great currents in the history of economic thought and their principal representatives and major texts; at least cursory understanding of several basic building blocks of economic theory; some intuition for the assumptions and methodological choices that establish economics as an autonomous endeavour of research in the social sciences.

Content Following an introductory class on the methodology of economics and the conditions under which it might be considered a scientific endeavour akin to the natural sciences rather than a descriptive and hermeneutic endeavour akin to history or political science, the basic structure of the course is chronological (see plan below). Different theoretical approaches are presented in the context of their times and illustrated with simple numerical examples or diagrams that could also figure in introductory textbooks of micro- and macroeconomics. Wherever possible and pertinent, historical questions are linked to contemporary economic questions, e.g., Aristotle s chrematistics and what constitutes a good life, Mandeville and the question of ethics in economics, mercantilism and modern trade disputes, the physiocrats and the question of natural resources, Ricardo and modern sources of rent, Marxism and the theory of crises, Veblen and the conspicuous consumption of leisure in the time of Facebook. Adam Smith, as the proponent of decentralised autoorganisation, the marginalists and Keynes remain, of course, directly relevant to modern economic issues in an all-pervasive and very direct manner. There are three further issues that might distinguish this class from other introductory classes to the history of economic thought. First, a particular emphasis is put on what we call the economic subject, i.e., the individual, entity, group or class, which defines the major economic issues and questions of the day and acts on them. In neoclassical economics, the economic subject is, of course, largely identical with the homo oeconomicus maximising individual utility. However, Aristotle, scholastic economic thought, mercantilism, the physiocrats, Marxism, institutionalism or even Keynes would have very different ideas about who constitutes the economic subject. Second, two classes are dedicated to Adam Smith as the founder of economics as an autonomous discipline independent of the other social sciences and a potentially scientific endeavour of research. We thus give space to the development in the Theory of Moral Sentiments of the anthropological foundations of the Smithian economic man, whose implications are then explored both at the micro and the macro level in the Wealth of Nations. This allows, in particular, a better understanding of the underlying assumptions behind the working of the invisible hand. Third, the class puts strong emphasis on the original writings (either in English or in English translation) of the key representatives of each current in the history of economic thought. While there are many competent historians of economic thought, nobody surpasses the writers who became classics in their ability to succinctly formulate ways forward out of the dilemmas posed by fundamental economic questions. Students will thus receive for each class by Email key chapters of the great economic texts as reading assignments. The decisive paragraphs will be read in class. Textbook The class does not use a single textbook. Students, who wish to do so, can receive the teaching notes (in French) upon request. As a first point of entry, other than the original texts, are recommended the individual entries on authors, movements or concepts in The New Palgrave: Dictionary of Economics (1987), Edited by Peter Newman, John Eatwell and Murray Milgate, London, Macmillan. Please also use The History of economic thought Website, http://www.hetwebsite.net/het/; McMaster University Archive for the History of Economic Thought, https://socserv2.socsci.mcmaster.ca/econ/ugcm/3ll3/; Online Library of Liberty: A collection of scholarly works about individual liberty and free markets, http://oll.libertyfund.org/. Saut de page

Structure of Class and Readings No. Topic of Class Readings 1 Object and method of economic science Milton Friedman (1953), The Methodology of Positive Economics in Essays in Positive Economics. Karl Popper (1935), The Logic of Scientific Discovery, Part I Introduction to the Logic of Science. Plato, The Laws, Chapters 5 and 9. 2 Ethics, religion and economy in antiquity and the middle ages Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, Book V. Aristotle, Politics, Book 1, Chapters 8-12. Thomas Aquinas, Summa teologica, Questions 77 78. Thomas Hobbes (1660), The Leviathan, Of the Nutrition and Procreation of A Commonwealth. 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Moral, politics and Economics in the renaissance and mercantilism John Locke (1690), The Second Treatise of Civil Government, Ch. 5 Of Property. Bernard Mandeville (1714), The Fable of the Bees: Or Private Vices, Public Benefits, The Grumbling Hive: Or Knaves Turned Honest. The political economy of the enlightened absolutism: the François Quesnay (1759), Economic Table. physiocrats Sympathy and wealth: Adam Smith and the homo oeconomicus Division of labour, value, and trade: Adam Smith Economist The classics: rent, distribution and growth in Say, Ricardo and Malthus Happiness or utility? The critique of the liberal economy from Plato to Marx Adam Smith (1759), The Theory of Moral Sentiments, Selected passages. Adam Smith (1776), An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations, Book I Of the Causes of Improvement in the Productive Power of Labour. David Ricardo (1817), Of the Principles of Political Economy and Trade, Chapters 1, 2 and 7 On Value, On Rent and On Foreign Trade. Karl Marx (1867), Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Vol. I, Book I, Part 1 Commodities and Money Individual optimization and general William Stanley Jevons (1871), Theory of equilibrium: Walras and Jevons, Political Economy, Ch 4 Theory of Exchange. Edgeworth and Pareto Increasing returns and Alfred Marshall (1890), Principles of competition in Alfred Marshall; Heterodox economic thinkers (Veblen, Schumpeter, Hayek) Economics, Book V, Ch. 12, Equilibrium of Normal Demand and Supply, Continued, with Reference to the Law of Increasing Return. Thorstein Veblen (1899), Theory of the Leisure

11 12 Exam Saut de page Keynes and the making of macroeconomics Class, Chapters 2-4 Pecuniary Emulation, Conspicuous Leisure, Conspicuous Consumption. John Maynard Keynes (1936), The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money, Chapter 3 The Principle of Effective Demand. Structure of Class and Topics for Written Assignments No. Topic of Class Topics for Written Assignments 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Object and method of economic science Ethics, religion and economy in antiquity and the middle ages Moral, politics and Economics in the renaissance and mercantilism The political economy of the enlightened absolutism: the physiocrats Sympathy and wealth: Adam Smith and the homo oeconomicus Division of labour, value, and trade: Adam Smith Economist The classics: rent, distribution and growth in Say, Ricardo and Malthus Happiness or utility? The critique of liberal economy from Plato to Marx (1) To which extent does Friedman methodology remain faithful to Popper? To which extent does it diverge? (2) The future of economics: Emulate the natural sciences, "colonise" the social sciences or return to political economy? Compare the economic subject in Aristotle, Plato or Aquinas (choose one) with the homo oeconomicus. (1) Is it ok to be selfish? Compare the responses of Machiavelli, Mandeville and Smith. (2) Is mercantilism really obsolete? Is it still being practices? Under which conditions can it still be justified? Quesnay and the physiocrats: Early liberals or reactionaries (pay attention to the roles of the King, of the aristocracy, to trade and agriculture)? How does the invisible hand work? What is the relationship between self-interest and general well-being in Smith? What are the roles of the impartial spectator and sympathy? Exchange value and use value: What is the relationship between Smith and Ricardo? Does use value still have meaning in the era of virtual reality? (1) Say s Law: profound truth or mirage? Discuss. (2) Rent: How is today s notion off rent different from that of Smith or Ricardo? (1) The crises of debt, financial markets and capitalism: Are there any lessons from the critics of the liberal economy in the

19 th century for today? 9 10 11 (2) What is/should be the ultimate objective of an economy? (1) General equilibrium and Pareto optimality: What prevents us to achieve them? Do we Individual optimization and general still want to achieve them? equilibrium: Walras and Jevons, Edgeworth and Pareto (2) What is utility? Compare the classics, the marginalists and modern notions (e.g., happiness theory). (1) Perfect competition and imperfect competition in the age of the Internet, globalisation and the gig economy Increasing returns and competition in Alfred Marshall; Heterodox economic thinkers (Veblen, Schumpeter, Hayek) Keynes and the making of macroeconomics (2) Veblen on conspicuous consumption : links to Adam Smith and the evolution of the notion in the age of Facebook (3) Compare the thinking of Hayek and Schumpeter on the efficiency of markets: similarities and differences 1. Keynes and Say s law: What prevents the return to full- employment equilibrium? 2. How does the economic subject in Keynes thought differ from the subject in standard neoclassical economics?