Skip to product information
1 of 1

The Market

Regular price $110.00
Regular price $110.00 Sale price $110.00
Sold out
Matt Watson unpacks the concept of the market to ask what does it really mean to allow ourselves to submit to market forces. This book provides a major contribution to a deeper appreciation of the ...
Read More
  • 31 December 2017
View Product Details

We have become accustomed to economists and politicians talking about “market forces” as if they are immutable laws of the universe. But what exactly is “the market”? Originally an abstract idea from economic theory – the locus of supply and demand – it has come to inform the way we speak about our relationship to the economic system as a whole.

Matthew Watson unpacks the concept to ask what does it really mean to allow ourselves to submit to market forces. And does economic theory really provide insights into the market institutions that shape our everyday life? In tackling these questions, the book provides a major contribution to a deeper appreciation of the dominant economic language of our time, challenging the idea that we can simply defer to the “logic of the market”.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $110.00
Pages: 192
Publisher: Agenda Publishing
Imprint: Agenda Publishing
Publication Date: 31 December 2017
Trim Size: 9.20 X 6.15 in
ISBN: 9781911116608
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economics / Theory, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economics / General, HISTORY / Social History, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Economic History
REVIEWS Icon
Watson has provided a history of the economic ideas that form the basis of modern economics, brilliantly explaining where many of the economic laws and concepts central to the idea of the market originated . . . there are very few texts on the market that are as good as this.
Matthew Watson is Professor of Political Economy in the Department of Politics and International Studies at the University of Warwick. His books include Foundations of International Political Economy (2005), The Political Economy of International Capital Mobility (2007) and Uneconomic Economics and the Crisis of the Model World (2014).
1. Introduction2. The market concept in triplicate3. Symmetrical moral relationships: Adam Smith's impartial spectator construct4. Demand and supply in partial equilibrium: the Marshallian cross diagram5. Vectors of market-clearing prices: the Walrasian auctioneer6. The political rhetoric of "the market"7. Conclusion