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THE FALSE PROMISE OF ENLIGHTENMENT

WE NEED METAPHORS to make sense of reality. But we are often unaware of how those metaphors can then dictate our reality. By defining our problems and challenges, the metaphors we choose to use inadvertently imply solutions. Three recent books, for example, paint a disturbing and dark vision of our present. By their telling, the worlds of data, finance, and law are like aquifers beneath our feet, an alternative geography of accumulation and extraction to which we are each bound by catheter-like lines. Handheld devices transmit our every experience for purposes of revenue creation while the rise and fall of pension funds and asset prices map our futures and those of our children and grandchildren.

If it gives you chills, it is supposed to. All three books are written as conscious interventions into what they see as an unacceptable state of affairs. We need to think carefully about the tales these books tell, but even more carefully about the remedies their metaphors propose.

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Economics After Neoliberalism (Summer 2019)
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Boston Review
ECONOMICS AFTER NEOLIBERAL ISM
This publication was made possible by a generous grant from The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
EDITOR’S NOTE
NEAR THE END of Capitalism and Freedom (1962), Milton
FORUM
ECONOMICS AFTER NEOLIBERAL ISM
We live in an age of astonishing inequality. Income
FORUM RESPONSES
ECONOMICS IS THE MATERIALITY OF MORAL CHOICE
FOR NON-ECONOMISTS on the left, “Economics After Neoliberalism”
ECONOMICS AFTER PARTISANSHIP
A DEFINING FEATURE of Naidu, Rodrik, and Zucman’s essay
IN DEFENSE OF NEOLIBERALISM
SINCE COMPLAINTS about the domination of market fundamentalism
MARKETS ARE POLITICAL
LIKE NAIDU, RODRIK, AND ZUCMAN, I celebrate the advantages
WHAT ABOUT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES?
AFTER NEARLY FOUR YEARS of working as chief economic
TRADE RESTRICTIONS WILL NOT ACHIEVE ETHICAL GLOBALIZATION
I WOULD LIKE TO FOCUS on Dani Rodrik’s scheme to combat
INCLUSIVE PROSPERITY FOR GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAINS
STRONG, INDEPENDENT LABOR MOVEMENTS have always been
A TRANSDISCIPLINARY APPROACH
(Eric Beinhocker, W. Brian Arthur, Robert Axtell, Jenna Bednar, Jean-Philippe Bouchaud, David Colander, Molly Crockett, J. Doyne Farmer, Ricardo Hausmann, Cars Hommes, Alan Kirman, Scott Page, and David Sloan Wilson)
“ILLIBERAL” ECONOMICS
“ECONOMICS AFTER NEOLIBERALISM” describes an economics
THE PERILS OF QUANTIFICATION
ECONOMICS STANDS DEEPLY COMMITTED to quantification
EMPIRICISM’S IMPLICIT BIAS
NAIDU, RODRIK, AND ZUCMAN are on the cutting edge of
ECONOMISTS SHOULD ENABLE DEMOCRATIC PRIORITIES
THE RESPONSES IN THIS FORUM are too insightful to engage
ESSAYS
SELLING KEYNESIANISM
“LET’S BRING OUR EDITORIAL MICROSCOPE into focus on
EVERYDAY ECONOMISTS
HOW DO WE TALK about economics? Robert Manduca’s essay
WHO OWNS CORPORATIONS?
IN 1962 MILTON FRIEDMAN- the economist who, more than
FREE SPEECH, INCORPORATED
THE FIRST AMENDMENT has long been celebrated as the
CONTRIBUTORS
Samuel Bowles is Arthur Spiegel Research Professor