13 de octubre de 2009

Mientras tanto en Suecia...

When economists show that market arrangements fail, they usually make the simple recommendation that “the” state should take care of these problems. Elinor Ostrom has demonstrated empirically that “the” state may not be “the” solution. Her work argues for the wisdom of institutional diversity, looking to individuals to solve problems rather than relying on top down, one-size-fits-all solutions. The conventional wisdom assumes that natural resources and environmental problems should be solved in a centralized—and if possible, global—manner. Through innovative analysis in the field, in the experimental laboratory, and in theory, Ostrom’s work has show that creative solutions to problems such as the depletion of common pool resources exist outside of the sphere of national governments. Hence today’s announcement that she had received the 2009 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences.
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On the one hand, there is the tradition defined by Adam Smith's theory of social order. Smith and his intellectual descendants focused on the pattern of order and the positive consequences emerging out of the independent actions of individuals pursuing their own interests within a given system of rules. (...) On the other hand, there is the tradition rooted in Thomas Hobbes’ theory of social order. From that perspective, individual actors pursuing their own interests and trying to maximize their welfare lead inevitably to chaos and conflict. From that is derived the necessity of a single center of power imposing order. (...) In Ostrom’s view, the theorists in both traditions managed to keep not only the theories of market and state alienated from each other, they also managed to keep the basic visions of the two separated. (...) What if we need "a richer set of policy formulations" than just "the" market or "the" state? Answering that challenge is probably the best way to see Ostrom’s work on governance and common pool resources: It’s an empirically-based contribution to a larger and bolder attempt to build an alternative to the basic dichotomy of modern political economy, an effort to find an alternative to the conceptions derived from Smith and Hobbes. (...) In study after study, she has shown that the principles of individual freedom, responsibility, entrepreneurial creativity, and resourcefulness apply not only to the production and distribution of private goods, they also apply to a large institutional domain outside the market order. This “third sector,” which is “neither state nor market,” may in fact be as important a battleground for the preservation of a free and prosperous social order as the market itself.

Reason

Bueno, a primera vista, doña Ostrom parece ser una elección más acertada que la de don Krugman el año pasado. A buscar papers...

UPDATE:
Beyond showing that self-governance can be feasible and successful, Ostrom also elucidates the key features of successful governance. One instance is that active participation of users in creating and enforcing rules appears to be essential. Rules that are imposed from the outside or unilaterally dictated by powerful insiders have less legitimacy and are more likely to be violated. Likewise, monitoring and enforcement work better when conducted by insiders than by outsiders. These principles are in stark contrast to the common view that monitoring and sanctioning are the responsibility of the state and should be conducted by public employees.

WSJ

3 comentarios:

A. m dijo...

Me gusto la premiación del trabajo, desconocido hasta ayer para mi, de Doña Orstrom y Don Williamson.

Pero como bien decian en un blog por ahi, esto ya varios han salido a decir que lo que plantean es que las soluciones individuales no sirven (individuales = individualistas), un entendimiento equivocado de lo que proponen ellos.

Cristian dijo...

Se nota que no tenes ni la menor idea de quien es esta mujer porque mas progresista que ella no hay, Mario Bunge saco un articulo en La Nacion explicando como defiende al cooperativismo y como ataca a los economistas liberales

Klaus Pieslinger dijo...

Me gustó la influencia que tuvo en el cambio constitucional de Alaska donde los recursos minerales dejan de ser propiedad del estado para pasar a ser de los residentes y recibir cheques por ello.
En cuanto a Bunge, su opinión me importa poco y nada.
Se ve que estás al pedo metiendo a la gente en tus esquemas Cristian.