Re: Re: Re: the expression "political economy" (fwd)

2000-04-08 Thread md7148
>Usually today people use the term when they are writing are the margins >of >neo-classical economics (that includes Buchanan). >Barnet Wagman wrote: >> The term 'international political economy' is/was used by international >> political scientists like Susan Strange - their use of the the term

Re: Re: Re: Re: the expression "political economy" (fwd)

2000-04-08 Thread md7148
>That is not the case in Canada. Here it is more usually associated with >the >left nationalist. very true point, Rod! I have always beleived that there is something interesting to look at in canadian leftism, eventhough canada is one of the core capitalist powers. Once, the left was associate

Re: Re: Re: Re: the expression "political economy" (fwd)

2000-04-08 Thread md7148
>In Canada, as Rod indicates, it has taken a very special meaning >as indicated in this quote from Wally Clement and Glen Williams, >edicated collection _The New Canadian Political Economy_. >"while political economy is based on a tradition that investigates >the relationship between economy

Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the expression "political economy" (fwd)

2000-04-09 Thread phillp2
Mine wrote: > >However,as you > know, there are some Marxists in the Marxist tradition who uncritically > subcribe to the notions of "orthodox" economics and free market > capitalism. This, I would charecterize as economic determinism, has > interesting commonalities with liberal economics since

Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: the expression "political economy"(fwd)

2000-04-10 Thread md7148
true. that is what I "meant"... Mine Ted wrote: >I didn't intend to suggest that Mine had used the phrase "bourgeois >thinker". What I was getting at was the idea that seemed implicit in her >question that Marshall and Keynes could not have radical ideas because >they >were not in some sense