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Towards a relational perspective in economics
Benedetto Gui
Sophia University Institute, Loppiano, Florence
Which is the greatest flaw of the economic
science for someone with a humanistic taste?
• Egoism
• Materialism
• Individualism
Egoism: experimental evidence
• Engel (2010) examines 328 experiments of
‘dictator game’, with a total of 20,813
osservazioni.
• 36% of players give nothing (or the minimum
amount)
• Engel’s final comment: “No doubt humans are
systematically more benevolent than “homo
oeconomicus”
The standard tools of economic analysis
can handle altruism quite easily
Materialism:
investment is more and more intangible
NFB = Non-Farm Business
Materialism: most outputs are intangible
Ukraine 9.4 34.4 56.2 2011 est.
United Arab
Emirates
0.8 53.9 45.3 2011 est.
United
Kingdom
0.7 21.4 77.8 2011 est.
United States 1.2 19.2 79.6 2011 est.
Uruguay 9.4 21.7 68.9 2011 est.
Hong Kong 0.1 6.8 93.2 2011 est.
Hungary 3.7 31.3 65.0 2011 est.
India 17.2 26.4 56.4 2011 est.
Indonesia 14.7 47.2 38.1 2011 est.
Iran 10.4 37.7 51.8 2011 est.
Country Agriculture Industry Services Year[1]
Afghanistan 34.9 25.0 40.0 2008 est.
Albania 20.7 19.7 59.6 2011 est.
Algeria 12.0 56.5 31.5 2011 est.
Intangible goods and economic reasoning
The concepts developed by economic theory
regarding production and consumption of, or
investment in, material goods can be
extended quite naturally to intangible goods
"Perhaps the grossest flaw in the economist's traditional
view of •the human being is illustrated by the attention
we devote to his •man-thing activities as opposed to
man-man activities.
Our •textbooks talk of tastes for cheese or shoes or
automobiles, rarely for desires for children or mates or
subordinates or fraternal associates.
Other social scientists… have just •scorned this view of
man as rational unaffiliated thing-consumer, •interacting
with others only through market exchange.“
Jack Hirschleifer (1978). Natural Economy Versus Political
Economy, Journal of Social & Biological Structures 1: 319-37.
Individualism, individualism!
How we got there (1)
Modern economic theory developed with a
special focus on the market mechanism
(economists were fascinated by its features and
furthermore it represented a separate sphere,
the domain of the students of a new science).
But the market lends itself well to exchanging
goods of a private nature, so the students of the
market are led to focus on them, and on the
needs those goods can satisfy.
How we got there (2)
Some XIX scholars were aware of this problem.
In particular in the German-speaking academy there
was a debate whether economists should also
consider “relationship-goods”, such as “relationships
of hospitality, love, family”.
Authors such as Menger and Böhm-Bawerk were
involved. They took somewhat contradictory
positions, and in the end the question was
abandoned.
Two possible explanations:
i) greater complexity of such “goods”;
ii) ii) individualistic orientation of the economic
discipline, especially in the Anglo-Saxon tradition.
What the glasses of economics do not see.
An extreme case: Walras’ general equilibrium
 The economy is essentially a set of markets.
 Economic interaction is synonymous with exchange
 Exchange is centralized, and proceeds as follows:
o an auctioneer announces a price for each good;
o economic agents declare how much they intend to sell/buy of
each good at those prices;
o the auctioneer raises the price proposed for the goods whose
demand exceeds supply, and viceversa;
o agents respond reformulating their demand/supply , and so
on until all markets clear;
o at this points each agent delivers/withdraws the quantities
announced.
• Agents do not need to interact directly with each other
What is missing in Walras’ description? (1)
1) The richness of communication
processes and their manifold effects
A modern attempt at enriching the
economists’ view of human interactions
Manski (2000): beside «market interactions»
there exist «social interactions»
More precisely, actions by others influence:
- our constraints (if others take that road, my
travel time increases)
- our information (a queue outside a shop
signals favorable price/quality ratios)
- our preferences (conformism, choice to live in
an area depend on who else does it )
In the end Manski admits:
“… I have restricted attention to processes in
which agents affect each other through actions.
A more general class of interactions permits the
preferences, expectations and constraints of one
agent to affect the preferences, expectations,
and constraints of another agent in ways that
are not mediated through actions...
After all, humans do communicate about all
sorts of things" (Manski, 2000, p. 121).
What does direct communication
permit, or facilitate?
• Education
• Psychotherapy
• Therapy
• Reputation
• Coordination (e.g. in organizations)
• Innovation diffusion
• …
And furthermore
As the economic agent is more than an
«economic man», economic interactions are in
fact a multidimensional encounter.
Especially in face-to-face events humans also
interact on the affective level, communicate
mutual dispositions (and value them greatly).
[Social psychology has a lot to say about this]
What is missing in Walras’ description? (2)
2) Communication responds to intrinsic
(i.e. non-instrumental) needs
i. workers take or leave jobs because of the
interpersonal climate (not only wages,…)
ii. the quality of life depends on the intensity
and content of informal social interactions
Determinants of job satisfaction
Satisfaction with the job as a whole vs. other items of
satisfaction (Borzaga & Depedri, 2005; ordered probit)
Variables Coeff. P[|Z|>z] Signif.
Constant -1.4041 .0000 ***
professional development 0.1647 .0000 ***
Decision-making autonomy 0.0491 .0031 ***
recognition of one’s contribution 0.0963 .0000 ***
variety and creativity of the job 0.1255 .0000 ***
the working environment 0.0497 .0017 ***
the social usefulness of the job 0.0874 .0000 ***
the salary 0.0691 .0000 ***
Working hours 0.0581 .0003 ***
Previous career advancements -0.0113 .5809
future career advancements -0.0109 .6056
job security 0.0268 .0615 *
relations with superiors 0.1117 .0000 ***
relations with colleagues 0.0388 .0339 **
Significance: ***=less than 1%, **=less than 5%, *=less than 10%.
What about satisfaction with life,
or «happiness»?
A vast literature has investigated
«subjective well-being» following the
seminal work by Richard Easterling
(1974).
Information is collected through
questionnaires by asking people
about their feelings, or else their
evaluation of their own life.
21
Source: Easterlin (2001)
GDP and happiness in the US: Easterlin’s paradox
China’s economic miracle and happiness
S.Bartolini & F.Sarracino. The dark side of Chinese growth: Explaining decreasing
well-being in times of economic boom, MPRA WP No. 5776, Aug. 2014.
If not GDPpc or income, what brings happiness?
Better look at interpersonal relationships!
But, paradoxically, happiness studies give us a money
equivalent of:
• being married
o 100,000 $ per year (Blanchflower and Oswald, 2004, US)
o 50,500£ per year (Powdthavee, 2006, UK)
• having an additional associate in one’s neighbourhood
o 438 € per month (Groot et al. 2006, Netherland)
• having the opportunity of meeting friends often
o 85,000£ per year (Powdthavee, 2006, UK)
Do not be horrified! If this is so, economic science must take
these entities into account.
Relational goods
One way of describing the evidence above
within the language of economic theory is by
making recourse to the notion of «good»,
something that :
- satisfies to a need
- and has a cost
Hence the expression «relational goods»
Humans like/need entities such as:
• recognition
• consideration
• belonging
• company
• sharing sentiments
• mutual understanding
• Love
Do such entities have a cost?
Beware the difference between cost and price.
Cost has to do with what you must give up in
order to obtain a good
For relational goods to come into existence
something certainly must be diverted from
other activities: time
"the increasing supply of material goods per hour
worked means that <<time becomes scarcer in
relation to goods>> .. more time is needed for
consuming more material goods, and … there is a
decreased quantity of time available for the time-
consuming activities of sociability and friendliness”
Fred Hirsch, Social Limits to Growth, 1978, p.262-3
Apart from time, what else is needed for
obtaining, or «producing» relational goods?
The strange «production technology»
of relational goods
Relational goods are produced in personalised
interactions by interactants themselves (who are
also those who «consume» them)
Most often relational goods arise as a side product
of other activities that lead people to interact face
to face (to be envolved in «encounter»).
Also «relational bads» can be produced (and –
inevitably – consumed) in encounters. So how the
interaction develops makes a lot of difference.
Modelling consumption in interaction
(extending Gary Becker’s suggestions)
INTERACTANTS’HUMAN RESOURCES
time &
effort
human capital
specific non-specific
NON-HUMAN
RESOURCES
(intermediate
goods & services)
«PRO-SUMPTION»PROCESS
changes in
human
capital
(specific &
non-specific)
EXTERNAL
ENVIRONMENT
(physical &
social)
changes in
the external
environment
(physical &
social)
final
commodities
consumed
(action-
dependent)
final
commodities
consumed
(attitude-
dependent)
By the way:
relational vs. environmental goods
- both are ignored in national accounting
- both involve capital goods that tend not to be
recognized
- if classes of important goods are disregarded, the
conventional search for efficiency tends to be
biased and therefore counterproductive
- both can be part of a more humane and possibly
more satisfactory economic lifestyle (even a more
efficient one)
EXCHANGES? ENCOUNTERS!
RELATIONAL GOODS INSIDE THE ECONOMIC SPHERE
HUMAN RESOURCES OF INTERACTANTS
time and effort
“human capital”
non relation-
specific
relation-specific
NON-HUMAN
RESOURCES
(transportation,
accommodation)
ENCOUNTER
exchanges
Provision
of services
execution of
productive or
decision-
making tasks
relational
consumption
goods
changes in
interactants’
human capital
External
environment
Intentions and
motivations
A final comment
The concept of relational goods helps us enlarge our
vision of economic life, but it is still quite simple
from the anthropological point of view.
It cannot adequately express a vision of humans
beings as having a vocation for communion, a vision
of human fulfilment that passes through going out
of oneself and opening to others (and hopefully be
reciprocated by them).
Yet it is a useful tool for bringing something of this
vision into the standard economic discourse.

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Benedetto Gui: Towars a realtional perspective in economics

  • 1. Towards a relational perspective in economics Benedetto Gui Sophia University Institute, Loppiano, Florence
  • 2. Which is the greatest flaw of the economic science for someone with a humanistic taste? • Egoism • Materialism • Individualism
  • 3. Egoism: experimental evidence • Engel (2010) examines 328 experiments of ‘dictator game’, with a total of 20,813 osservazioni. • 36% of players give nothing (or the minimum amount) • Engel’s final comment: “No doubt humans are systematically more benevolent than “homo oeconomicus”
  • 4. The standard tools of economic analysis can handle altruism quite easily
  • 5. Materialism: investment is more and more intangible NFB = Non-Farm Business
  • 6. Materialism: most outputs are intangible Ukraine 9.4 34.4 56.2 2011 est. United Arab Emirates 0.8 53.9 45.3 2011 est. United Kingdom 0.7 21.4 77.8 2011 est. United States 1.2 19.2 79.6 2011 est. Uruguay 9.4 21.7 68.9 2011 est. Hong Kong 0.1 6.8 93.2 2011 est. Hungary 3.7 31.3 65.0 2011 est. India 17.2 26.4 56.4 2011 est. Indonesia 14.7 47.2 38.1 2011 est. Iran 10.4 37.7 51.8 2011 est. Country Agriculture Industry Services Year[1] Afghanistan 34.9 25.0 40.0 2008 est. Albania 20.7 19.7 59.6 2011 est. Algeria 12.0 56.5 31.5 2011 est.
  • 7. Intangible goods and economic reasoning The concepts developed by economic theory regarding production and consumption of, or investment in, material goods can be extended quite naturally to intangible goods
  • 8. "Perhaps the grossest flaw in the economist's traditional view of •the human being is illustrated by the attention we devote to his •man-thing activities as opposed to man-man activities. Our •textbooks talk of tastes for cheese or shoes or automobiles, rarely for desires for children or mates or subordinates or fraternal associates. Other social scientists… have just •scorned this view of man as rational unaffiliated thing-consumer, •interacting with others only through market exchange.“ Jack Hirschleifer (1978). Natural Economy Versus Political Economy, Journal of Social & Biological Structures 1: 319-37. Individualism, individualism!
  • 9. How we got there (1) Modern economic theory developed with a special focus on the market mechanism (economists were fascinated by its features and furthermore it represented a separate sphere, the domain of the students of a new science). But the market lends itself well to exchanging goods of a private nature, so the students of the market are led to focus on them, and on the needs those goods can satisfy.
  • 10. How we got there (2) Some XIX scholars were aware of this problem. In particular in the German-speaking academy there was a debate whether economists should also consider “relationship-goods”, such as “relationships of hospitality, love, family”. Authors such as Menger and Böhm-Bawerk were involved. They took somewhat contradictory positions, and in the end the question was abandoned. Two possible explanations: i) greater complexity of such “goods”; ii) ii) individualistic orientation of the economic discipline, especially in the Anglo-Saxon tradition.
  • 11. What the glasses of economics do not see. An extreme case: Walras’ general equilibrium  The economy is essentially a set of markets.  Economic interaction is synonymous with exchange  Exchange is centralized, and proceeds as follows: o an auctioneer announces a price for each good; o economic agents declare how much they intend to sell/buy of each good at those prices; o the auctioneer raises the price proposed for the goods whose demand exceeds supply, and viceversa; o agents respond reformulating their demand/supply , and so on until all markets clear; o at this points each agent delivers/withdraws the quantities announced. • Agents do not need to interact directly with each other
  • 12. What is missing in Walras’ description? (1) 1) The richness of communication processes and their manifold effects
  • 13. A modern attempt at enriching the economists’ view of human interactions Manski (2000): beside «market interactions» there exist «social interactions» More precisely, actions by others influence: - our constraints (if others take that road, my travel time increases) - our information (a queue outside a shop signals favorable price/quality ratios) - our preferences (conformism, choice to live in an area depend on who else does it )
  • 14. In the end Manski admits: “… I have restricted attention to processes in which agents affect each other through actions. A more general class of interactions permits the preferences, expectations and constraints of one agent to affect the preferences, expectations, and constraints of another agent in ways that are not mediated through actions... After all, humans do communicate about all sorts of things" (Manski, 2000, p. 121).
  • 15. What does direct communication permit, or facilitate? • Education • Psychotherapy • Therapy • Reputation • Coordination (e.g. in organizations) • Innovation diffusion • …
  • 16. And furthermore As the economic agent is more than an «economic man», economic interactions are in fact a multidimensional encounter. Especially in face-to-face events humans also interact on the affective level, communicate mutual dispositions (and value them greatly). [Social psychology has a lot to say about this]
  • 17. What is missing in Walras’ description? (2) 2) Communication responds to intrinsic (i.e. non-instrumental) needs i. workers take or leave jobs because of the interpersonal climate (not only wages,…) ii. the quality of life depends on the intensity and content of informal social interactions
  • 18. Determinants of job satisfaction
  • 19. Satisfaction with the job as a whole vs. other items of satisfaction (Borzaga & Depedri, 2005; ordered probit) Variables Coeff. P[|Z|>z] Signif. Constant -1.4041 .0000 *** professional development 0.1647 .0000 *** Decision-making autonomy 0.0491 .0031 *** recognition of one’s contribution 0.0963 .0000 *** variety and creativity of the job 0.1255 .0000 *** the working environment 0.0497 .0017 *** the social usefulness of the job 0.0874 .0000 *** the salary 0.0691 .0000 *** Working hours 0.0581 .0003 *** Previous career advancements -0.0113 .5809 future career advancements -0.0109 .6056 job security 0.0268 .0615 * relations with superiors 0.1117 .0000 *** relations with colleagues 0.0388 .0339 ** Significance: ***=less than 1%, **=less than 5%, *=less than 10%.
  • 20. What about satisfaction with life, or «happiness»? A vast literature has investigated «subjective well-being» following the seminal work by Richard Easterling (1974). Information is collected through questionnaires by asking people about their feelings, or else their evaluation of their own life.
  • 21. 21 Source: Easterlin (2001) GDP and happiness in the US: Easterlin’s paradox
  • 22. China’s economic miracle and happiness S.Bartolini & F.Sarracino. The dark side of Chinese growth: Explaining decreasing well-being in times of economic boom, MPRA WP No. 5776, Aug. 2014.
  • 23. If not GDPpc or income, what brings happiness? Better look at interpersonal relationships! But, paradoxically, happiness studies give us a money equivalent of: • being married o 100,000 $ per year (Blanchflower and Oswald, 2004, US) o 50,500£ per year (Powdthavee, 2006, UK) • having an additional associate in one’s neighbourhood o 438 € per month (Groot et al. 2006, Netherland) • having the opportunity of meeting friends often o 85,000£ per year (Powdthavee, 2006, UK) Do not be horrified! If this is so, economic science must take these entities into account.
  • 24. Relational goods One way of describing the evidence above within the language of economic theory is by making recourse to the notion of «good», something that : - satisfies to a need - and has a cost Hence the expression «relational goods»
  • 25. Humans like/need entities such as: • recognition • consideration • belonging • company • sharing sentiments • mutual understanding • Love
  • 26. Do such entities have a cost? Beware the difference between cost and price. Cost has to do with what you must give up in order to obtain a good For relational goods to come into existence something certainly must be diverted from other activities: time
  • 27. "the increasing supply of material goods per hour worked means that <<time becomes scarcer in relation to goods>> .. more time is needed for consuming more material goods, and … there is a decreased quantity of time available for the time- consuming activities of sociability and friendliness” Fred Hirsch, Social Limits to Growth, 1978, p.262-3 Apart from time, what else is needed for obtaining, or «producing» relational goods?
  • 28. The strange «production technology» of relational goods Relational goods are produced in personalised interactions by interactants themselves (who are also those who «consume» them) Most often relational goods arise as a side product of other activities that lead people to interact face to face (to be envolved in «encounter»). Also «relational bads» can be produced (and – inevitably – consumed) in encounters. So how the interaction develops makes a lot of difference.
  • 29. Modelling consumption in interaction (extending Gary Becker’s suggestions) INTERACTANTS’HUMAN RESOURCES time & effort human capital specific non-specific NON-HUMAN RESOURCES (intermediate goods & services) «PRO-SUMPTION»PROCESS changes in human capital (specific & non-specific) EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT (physical & social) changes in the external environment (physical & social) final commodities consumed (action- dependent) final commodities consumed (attitude- dependent)
  • 30. By the way: relational vs. environmental goods - both are ignored in national accounting - both involve capital goods that tend not to be recognized - if classes of important goods are disregarded, the conventional search for efficiency tends to be biased and therefore counterproductive - both can be part of a more humane and possibly more satisfactory economic lifestyle (even a more efficient one)
  • 31. EXCHANGES? ENCOUNTERS! RELATIONAL GOODS INSIDE THE ECONOMIC SPHERE HUMAN RESOURCES OF INTERACTANTS time and effort “human capital” non relation- specific relation-specific NON-HUMAN RESOURCES (transportation, accommodation) ENCOUNTER exchanges Provision of services execution of productive or decision- making tasks relational consumption goods changes in interactants’ human capital External environment Intentions and motivations
  • 32. A final comment The concept of relational goods helps us enlarge our vision of economic life, but it is still quite simple from the anthropological point of view. It cannot adequately express a vision of humans beings as having a vocation for communion, a vision of human fulfilment that passes through going out of oneself and opening to others (and hopefully be reciprocated by them). Yet it is a useful tool for bringing something of this vision into the standard economic discourse.