Sunday , November 24 2024
Home / Mike Norman Economics / Erik Reinert — Towards a better understanding of convergence and divergence: or, how the present EU strategy – at the expense of the economic periphery – neglects the theories that once made Europe successful

Erik Reinert — Towards a better understanding of convergence and divergence: or, how the present EU strategy – at the expense of the economic periphery – neglects the theories that once made Europe successful

Summary:
This new working paper attempts to address some of the main problems of the European Union today. The main thesis is that the Weltanschauung and the economic narrative on which the European project has been based have changed radically since the inception of the European Project, from one conducive to convergence and cohesion to another which is conducive to divergence and, in the last instance – I shall argue – to a form of internal colonialism towards the economic periphery. The field of Science and Technology employs the term sociotechnical imaginary [1] about the collective narratives and visions of social futures and of the common good. I shall argue that the European Union has moved away from the sociotechnical imaginary, or narrative, that dominated after World War II. I shall

Topics:
Mike Norman considers the following as important: , , , , , , , ,

This could be interesting, too:

Michael Hudson writes All Of Our Wealth Has Been Coming From You

Michael Hudson writes Germany as Collateral Damage in America’s New Cold War

Frances Coppola writes When populism fails

Michael Hudson writes Escaping the Western Rentier

This new working paper attempts to address some of the main problems of the European Union today. The main thesis is that the Weltanschauung and the economic narrative on which the European project has been based have changed radically since the inception of the European Project, from one conducive to convergence and cohesion to another which is conducive to divergence and, in the last instance – I shall argue – to a form of internal colonialism towards the economic periphery.
The field of Science and Technology employs the term sociotechnical imaginary [1] about the collective narratives and visions of social futures and of the common good. I shall argue that the European Union has moved away from the sociotechnical imaginary, or narrative, that dominated after World War II. I shall argue that this post WW II Marshall Plan Narrative (MPN) gave way to an equilibrium-based Neo-Classical Economics Narrative with an added innovation rhetoric, which I shall argue is based on a fairly shallow understanding of innovation (which I shall call NC+I)....
Worthwhile post. The working paper looks good, too, but I haven't yet read it.

He sums up the problem in economics as it is practiced in relation to policy formulation. Conventional economics is a simplification that tends toward oversimplification. Policy based on conventional economists' modeling assumptions and methodological choices risks being unrealistic. This has consequences that manifest not only economically but also socially and politically.

In other words, we must attempt to perceive the complex realities behind simple numbers.
Developing Economics
Towards a better understanding of convergence and divergence: or, how the present EU strategy – at the expense of the economic periphery – neglects the theories that once made Europe successful
Erik Reinert | Professor of Technology Governance and Development Strategies at Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia, Senior Research Fellow at NORISS, Norwegian Institute of Strategic Studies, in Oslo., and Founder and Chairman of the Other Canon Foundation
Mike Norman
Mike Norman is an economist and veteran trader whose career has spanned over 30 years on Wall Street. He is a former member and trader on the CME, NYMEX, COMEX and NYFE and he managed money for one of the largest hedge funds and ran a prop trading desk for Credit Suisse.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *