Economic Development and the Death of the Free Market

dc.contributor.authorFix, Blair
dc.date.accessioned2022-10-28T20:55:55Z
dc.date.available2022-10-28T20:55:55Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.descriptionculture development energy free market hierarchy multilevel selection power sociality
dc.description.abstractFree markets are, according to neoclassical economic theory, the most efficient way of organizing human activity. The claim is that individuals can benefit society by acting only in their self interest. In contrast, the evolutionary theory of multilevel selection proposes that groups must suppress the self interest of individuals. They often do so, the evidence suggests, by using hierarchical organization. To test these conflicting theories, I investigate how the ‘degree of hierarchy’ in societies changes with industrial development. I find that as energy use increases, governments tend to get larger and the relative number of managers tends to grow. Using a numerical model, I infer from this evidence that societies tend to become more hierarchical as energy use grows. This result is inconsistent with the neoclassical theory that individual self-interest is what benefits society. But it is consistent with the theory of multilevel selection, in which groups suppress the self-interest of their members.
dc.identifier.citationEconomic Development and the Death of the Free Market. Fix, Blair. (2020). Working Papers on Capital as Power. No. 2020/01. May. pp. 1-59. (Article - Working Paper; English).
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10315/39833
dc.titleEconomic Development and the Death of the Free Market
dc.typeWorking Paper

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