INDECS - Paper abstract
 

MODELLING MARKETS VERSUS MARKET
ECONOMIES: SUCCESS AND FAILURE

Z. Gilányi

  Department of Microeconomics, Corvinus University of Budapest
  Budapest, Hungary

Received: 19 September, 2005. Accepted: 15 October, 2005.

Presented at DECOS 2005.

SUMMARY

Non-linear, stochastic, thermodynamic, agent based or network modelling are powerful tools brought from other fields into economics. Applied in almost every sub-field of economics, these tools had however substantial success only in the analysis of financial markets. We suggest that the reason for this is less the insufficiency of these technical tools but rather the incapacity of mainstream economic theory to adequately represent the functioning of modern market economies. We argue that the method of mainstream economics to understand market economies by the help of simultaneous price determination on all markets fails to provide a satisfactory representation of our economies. As a result, when modelling financial markets, the final goal - a satisfactory determination of prices - is achieved; but when modelling market economies, the final goal - a satisfactory representation of modern market economies - is not achieved even if all prices are satisfactorily determined.


KEY WORDS

economic relation, market concept, credit operation, monetary economy


CLASSIFICATION

APA 2910
JEL:E10, E13, E42


Full paper as pdf version.

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