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Constitutional Economics

Information and documents concerning the course "Constitutional Economics" in Summer Term 2006.


Prof. Dr. Bernhard Neumärker

 

Lecture

Time: Tue. 14 - 16h
Place: Room 1009

Tutorial

Time: Thu. 10 - 12h
Place: Room 1228/30

Start

Lecture: First week.
Tutorial: Third week.

Target Group

This course is designated for second-year IMP-Students (Master of Economics and Politics), Diploma-Students (Hauptstudium) and students of other faculties (Magister).

Credits

  • IMP: 6 Credit Points (exam including tutorial).
  • Diploma: Creditable to Pflichtfach "Wirtschaftspolitik: Ordnungspolitik" and Pflichtwahlfächer "Ordnungs- und Wettbewerbspolitik", "Sozialpolitik".
    • 4 Credit Points (exam without tutorial).
    • 6 Credit Points (exam including tutorial).
  • Other students: 6 Credit Points equivalent (exam including tutorial).

Downloads

Lecture:

Tutorial:

Outline and References

Outline

  1. Introduction
  2. The constitutional perspective in economics
    1. Constitutional and orthodox view of economics [3,4,6,8]
    2. The methodological hard core of constitutional analysis [4]
    3. Constitutional economics as a part of modern political economy [3,4,14]
    4. The logic of constitutional constraints [3,4,6,14]
    5. Constitutional design and constitutional reform [2,9,10,13]
    6. Constitutions as social contracts [10,12,13,14]
      6.1 Explicit and implicit contracts
      6.2 Complete and incomplete contracts
    7. Normative and positive constitutional economics [1,4,9,11,13,15]
      7.1 Emergence and stability of constitutions
      7.2 Economic effects of constitutional rules
      7.3 'Optimal' constitutions
  3. Applications
    1. Constitutional design of democratic institutions [1,7,10,14]
    2. Fiscal constitutions [3]
    3. Constitutional rules for market regulation [5,13]
    4. Constitutional change and rent-seeking [8,14]
    5. Economic policy consequences of constitutional arrangements [5,15]

References

  1. Acemoglu, D., Robinson, J.A.: Economic Origins of Dictatorship and Democracy, Cambridge 2006.
  2. Bailey, M.J.: Constitution for a Future Country, Basingstoke et al. 2001.
  3. Brennan, G., Buchanan, J. M.: The Power to Tax, Cambridge et al. 1980.
  4. Brennan, G., Buchanan, J. M.: The Reason of Rules, Cambridge et al. 1985.
  5. Buchanan, J. M.: The Constitution of Economic Policy, in: American Economic Review 77 (1987), 243-250.
  6. Buchanan, J. M.: The Limits of Liberty, Chicago 1975.
  7. Buchanan, J.M., Tullock, G.: The Calculus of Consent, Ann Arbor 1962.
  8. Cooter, R.D.: The Strategic Constitution, Princeton/N.J. et al. 2000.
  9. Dixit, A.K.: The Making of Economic Policy, Cambridge/Mass. 1996.
  10. Gersbach, H.: Designing Democracy, Berlin et al. 2005.
  11. Greif, A.: Institutions and the Path to the Modern Economy, Cambridge 2006.
  12. Hardin, R.: Liberalism, Constitutionalism, and Democracy, Oxford 1999.
  13. Laffont, J.-J.: Incentives and Political Economy, Oxford et al. 2000.
  14. Mueller, D.C.: Public Choice III, Cambridge 2003.
  15. Persson, T., Tabellini, G.: The Economic Effects of Constitutions, Cambridge/ Mass. 2003.

Supplementary articles will be announced.

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