On Virtue Economics

Date

2016

Authors

Baurmann, Michael
BRENNAN, geoffrey

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Abstract

This chapter makes a case for economists taking account of agent virtue in their models, on the grounds that doing so both broadens the normative base that economists standardly deploy and adds explanatory power in many settings of interest to economists. After distinguishing three different ways in which virtue might be included in economic analysis—virtue as intrinsically valuable, virtue as derivatively valuable, and virtue as fact—we examine the relevance of virtue to three topics: invisible hand mechanisms, the role of esteem in individual motivations, and the use of selection and allocation mechanisms in institutional design. We try to explain why each of these topics is relevant to the study of virtue.

Description

Keywords

invisible hand explanations,, esteem, selection, institutional design,, normative frameworks

Citation

Source

Type

Book chapter

Book Title

Economics and the Virtues: Building a New Moral Foundation

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31