Karl Polanyi and Return of the "Primitive" in Institutional Economics
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Özveren, Eyüp (Author)
Title
Karl Polanyi and Return of the "Primitive" in Institutional Economics
Abstract
This article discusses a renewed interest in the work of scholar Karl Polanyi and the incorporation of his work into the body of institutional economics. This article discusses the notion of time in Polanyi's work and how it differs from the metaphor of time inherent in neoclassical economics. The author discusses the definition of the word "primitives" and its relationship to social policy, and how Polanyi deployed the actual state of primitives in order to replace the economistic cost-benefit analysis of the Industrial Revolution with a "social cost" alternative.
Publication
Journal of Economic Issues (Association for Evolutionary Economics)
Volume
41
Issue
3
Pages
783-808
Date
September 2007
Journal Abbr
Journal of Economic Issues (Association for Evolutionary Economics)
Language
English
ISSN
00213624
Accessed
2017-01-10, 7:34 p.m.
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Özveren, Eyüp. 2007. “Karl Polanyi and Return of the ‘Primitive’ in Institutional Economics.” Journal of Economic Issues (Association for Evolutionary Economics) 41 (3): 783–808.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
- corporate culture
- cost effectiveness
- externalities
- externalities (economics)
- industrial psychology
- industrial revolution
- institutional economics
- POLANYI, Karl, 1886-1964
- social policy
- social psychology
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