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HAYEK’S POLITICAL ECONOMY: ITS RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head, Policy Studies Division Malaysian Institute of Economic Research Kuala Lumpur Malaysian Institute of Economic Research

HAYEK’S POLITICAL ECONOMY: ITS RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head, Policy Studies Division Malaysian

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Page 1: HAYEK’S POLITICAL ECONOMY: ITS RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head, Policy Studies Division Malaysian

HAYEK’S POLITICAL ECONOMY: ITS RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING ECONOMIES

Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head,

Policy Studies DivisionMalaysian Institute of Economic Research

Kuala Lumpur

 

Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head,

Policy Studies DivisionMalaysian Institute of Economic Research

Kuala Lumpur

 

Malaysian Institute of Economic ResearchMalaysian Institute of Economic Research

Page 2: HAYEK’S POLITICAL ECONOMY: ITS RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head, Policy Studies Division Malaysian

Problem of Order

Hayek’s central problem in economics: coordination How does spontaneous order emerge? Issue at hand: Millions

of different individuals, incomplete knowledge Private property is the cornerstone of an economy. Private

production necessary, otherwise there’ll be no market for production

A market necessary for means of production, failing which there’ll be no prices

Without prices, there’ll be no measure of the scarcity of capital goods and a way of calculating alternative uses of capital goods

Page 3: HAYEK’S POLITICAL ECONOMY: ITS RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head, Policy Studies Division Malaysian

Order

Problems with planning: Planning requires that government officials have

discretionary power that go beyond formal rules Planning needs high level of agreement that democracy may

not be able to deliver Widespread agreement lays foundation for dictatorship Planning leads to officials intervening to correct past

failures, causing a “slippery slope” syndrome

Page 4: HAYEK’S POLITICAL ECONOMY: ITS RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head, Policy Studies Division Malaysian

If Not Planning, Then What?

Constituents of a ‘good’ economy: Respect for private property Rule of law Stable monetary order

 

Page 5: HAYEK’S POLITICAL ECONOMY: ITS RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head, Policy Studies Division Malaysian

Then What?

General rules important They should be predictable, known by all and meted out irrespective

of title or position. This allows individuals to learn and adapt their behaviour in a

manner that coordinates their activities with others.

  General welfare should be the objective of government; not specific

goals of individuals. Discriminatory laws damage rules of just conduct.

 

 

Page 6: HAYEK’S POLITICAL ECONOMY: ITS RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head, Policy Studies Division Malaysian

Social Justice

Social justice should not mean specific distributional outcomes or particular distributions of resources. Specific distributions would require intervention, which will result in political

decisions that will alter the rules of the economic game.

Liberal economics as much concerned with poverty as socialists. (Or, at least they should be!). Liberal economists believe in the power of the market to achieve this rather than

interventionism and planning.

 

Page 7: HAYEK’S POLITICAL ECONOMY: ITS RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head, Policy Studies Division Malaysian

Not Neoclassical Economics

Dispersed knowledge used in making decisions. Economic process as one of expectations, decisions, realizations and realignment.

Neoclassical economics gives undue emphasis to equilibrium while ignoring the process of discovery.

 

 

Page 8: HAYEK’S POLITICAL ECONOMY: ITS RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head, Policy Studies Division Malaysian

Conclusion

To summarise, main points of Hayek’s economics: Coordination Dispersed knowledge Liberal institutions, rule of law

 

Page 9: HAYEK’S POLITICAL ECONOMY: ITS RELEVANCE FOR DEVELOPING ECONOMIES Shankaran Nambiar, Senior Research Fellow and Head, Policy Studies Division Malaysian