Adam Smith's and Douglass North's Multidisciplinary Approach to Economic Development
This article aims to point out Adam Smith's and Douglass North's multidisciplinary approach to economic development and history. Based on a philosophical link of methodological issues, Smith and North shared a conceptual framework and explanatory principles in common as well as similar historical illustrations. In terms of the use of comprehensive and integrated models of society, politics, and economy, they presented that economic development relies on how far congenial both institutional environments and sociocultural values of justice, liberty, security, and equality are to economic agents, allowing the interplay between economic performance and polity/culture. Meanwhile, these suggest a bridging role between old and new institutionalism, and, more importantly, a revival of Smithian moral philosophical tradition in the history of economics.
Year of publication: |
2014
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Authors: | Kim, Kwangsu |
Published in: |
American Journal of Economics and Sociology. - Wiley Blackwell. - Vol. 73.2014, 1, p. 3-31
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Publisher: |
Wiley Blackwell |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
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