
Deficits, Debt, and Democracy: Wrestling with Tragedy on the Fiscal Commons Reprint Edition
Author(s): Richard E. Wagner (Author)
- Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
- Publication Date: October 30, 2013
- Edition: Reprint
- Language: English
- Print length: 208 pages
- ISBN-10: 1781007055
- ISBN-13: 9781781007051
Book Description
Not all commons settings have tragic outcomes, of course, but tragic outcomes loom large in democratic processes because they entail conflict between two very different forms of substantive rationality; the political and market rationalities. These are both orders that contain interactions among participants, but the institutional frameworks that govern those interactions differ, generating democratic budgetary tragedies. Those tragedies, moreover, are inherent in the conflict between the different rationalities and so cannot be eliminated. They can, as this book argues, be reduced by restoring a constitution of liberty in place of the constitution of control that has taken shape throughout the west over the past century.
Economists interested in public finance, public policy and political economy along with scholars of political science, public administration, law and political philosophy will find this book intriguing.
Contents:
Preface
1. Budgeting: The Elusive Quest for Fiscal Responsibility
2. Budgeting and Political Economy: A Theoretical Framework
3. Budget Deficits, Ricardian Equivalence, and Macro-Micro Supervenience
4. Property Rights, Societal Tectonics, and the Fiscal Commons
5. Parliamentary Assemblies as Peculiar Market Bazaars
6. Taxation, Fiscal Politics, and Political Pricing
7. Regulation as Alternative Taxation
8. Public Finance for a Constitution of Liberty
Bibliography
Index
Editorial Reviews
Review
–George R. Crowley, Review of Austrian Economics
‘With Wagner’s book, we now have a theoretical ice pick to pierce through the obvious outcomes on the surface to get a glimpse at the processes behind it.’
–Wolf von Laer, Journal of the History of Economic Thought
‘Richard Wagner’s Deficits, Debt, and Democracy: Wrestling with Tragedy on the Fiscal Commons Reprint Edition is essentially a sequel to his 2007 book, Fiscal Sociology and the Theory of Public Finance. . . Wagner’s framework merits wide attention. Specialists in public choice or public nance should put both Deficits, Debt and Democracy and Fiscal Sociology at the top of their reading lists. Wagner’s framework could shed light on a great many questions beyond public finance, leading one to hope that this book is but one sequel in an ongoing franchise.’
–Adam Martin, Zentralblatt MATH
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