000 01854nam a2200181Ia 4500
999 _c21596
_d21596
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008 200202s9999 xx 000 0 und d
082 _a338.9 MIS
100 _aMishan, E.J.
245 0 _aCosts of economic growth
260 _aEngland
260 _bPenguin Books
260 _c1979
300 _a240 p.
520 _aThis distinction assumes importance once it is recognized that economic presumption may be effectively undermined, and many popular propositions qualified, by recourse to economic analysis proper, especially that branch of it entering into the modern study of allocation problems. Thus, some part of Professor Galbraith's rejection of the economists' conventional preference for privately produced goods as against public goods might have been more formally expressed using the terminology of 'external diseconomies explained in Part Two of this volume. And if, for his own purposes, Galbraith eschewed this concept in favour of a more direct and intuitive appeal, there are good reasons, notwithstanding, for elaborating the more formal arguments connected with this concept in the present volume. By inculcating more discriminating economic criteria in the public mind, the stock appeal to profits, exports, growth, or national interest may lose its efficacy, and people may come to expect discussions of economic policy to comprehend a far broader range of alternatives than those in the news today. In the second place, an under standing of the formal arguments will add authority to the re presentations of the many associations in this country committed to the thankless aims of protesting against noise, smoke, pollution and the destruction of wild life and natural beauty, that follow in the wake of expanding industry and communications.
650 _aBalance of payments.
942 _cB
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