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Competition: The Birth of a New Science

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

The Mathematical Theory of Games Sheds Light On A Wide Range of Competitive Activities What do chess-playing computer programs, biological evolution, competitive sports, gambling, alternative voting... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

A Scientific Challenge to Economic Orthodoxy

This book is actually as much about cooperation as competition. In fact it is at its most enlightening when pointing out the failures of competition, whether in fisheries, auctions, or modern economies. We get a nice peek into some good experimental economics and several simple mathematical models, especially from game theory and economics. However I found it hard to find enough coherence in all this to call it a new science. Fortunately readers who find themselves getting bogged down in the math in the earlier chapters can skim or skip to the topics in the later chapters that interest them. They will be well rewarded. James Case is at his best in his attack on "perfect competition", the holy grail of neoclassical economics. He shows that this is actually a rare phenomenon in real economies, and that corporate oligopolies earn the same kind of profits as true monopolies. That is, when there are only a handful of major players, they always seem to find someway to collude, competing through marketing instead of price. He even goes so far as to make a virtue out oligopolies by suggesting the creation of a handful of giant farm cooperatives and of giant employment agencies, with legal protections. The employment agencies would replace unions and the farm cooperatives would replace farm price supports, both exercising countervailing market power to today's giant corporations. Government would impose tariffs and other protections to prevent foreign powers and outsourcing (think China & India) from wrecking this arrangement. Case points out how "free trade" has not been the practice of most rising economic powers, including the US and Britain, and that the adoption of free trade policies by Britain in the middle of the 19th century and by the US in the middle of the 20th century has led to the industrial decline of both. Of course many other authors, such as Kevin Phillips, have noted how this exposes neoclassical economics, or market fundamentalism, as ideology, not science. Case uses even stronger language: "Orthodox economics is no more a science than creation science, because, it too, has already identified the `truth'." However, "the perpetrators of pathological science are not guilty of fraud but of self-deception" (p. 323). Case notes that there are many schools of economics that don't buy into the reigning dogma, but these economists get no publicity and are shut out of top universities and journals. However I've found that even most progressive economists, except for a few like Herman Daly, are not aware of the foundational role of resources and environment for real-world economics. For example, Case himself anticipates the coming of totally automated factories, with soaring unemployment and inequality. Yet such factories-of-the-future would be the end products of sophisticated science and engineering and highly complex industrial networks, all based on abundant resources, especially cheap energy. With oil already in decline and with

Very interesting ... opened my eyes

I happened to pick up this book recently since it seemed to be at the junction between applied mathematics and economics. The author did not disappoint. He explores the world of economics through game theory and goes on to show how the current economic thinking has some serious flaws. It was very enjoyable and really opened my eyes to many common economic errors. For instance, conventional thinking is that when there are multiple vendors for a given product one has a much better chance of getting a lower price. The author shows how this is very unlikely. I used to be a big supporter of free trade and I am not any more. Excellent book and a must read for any intelligent person.
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