ABSTRACT

This book challenges some of the fundamental tenets of "free market" economics that have had a profound impact on public policy and the plight of the American worker. These include the beliefs that high wages inevitably mean low profits; that a "free" market will automatically reduce discrimination and pay inequality; that anti-trust legislation hinders competitive market forces; and that minimum wage laws and trade unions negatively impact the economy.Using both theoretical analysis and real-life examples, the author shows that these myths are a product of unrealistic behavioral assumptions on the part of "free market" economists about the typical worker. In fact, as the author makes clear, the level of workers' satisfaction with their jobs, as a reflection of how well they are paid and treated by their employers, has a direct impact on the quality level of the products they produce and, inevitably, the economic performance of the firms.

chapter 1|23 pages

Introduction

Revising the Microfoundations of Economics

chapter 7|13 pages

Interfirm, Interregional, and International Differences in Labor Productivity

Why Convergence Need Not Take Place

chapter 8|20 pages

The Economics of Profitable Inefficiency and Market Failure

A Behavioral Model of Path Dependency

chapter 12|14 pages

How Discriminatory Pay Inequality Can Persist

Even in Competitive Markets

chapter 13|17 pages

When Green Isn’t Mean

The Economics of Environmental Regulations

chapter 14|13 pages

Big Is Not Always Better

A Critical Appraisal of the Transaction Cost-Economizing Paradigm

chapter 15|11 pages

Culture as a Determinant of Material Welfare