超越均衡的秩序:路德维希·拉赫曼对看似不可调和传统的桥接

Order beyond Equilibrium: Ludwig Lachmann's Bridging of Seemingly Irreconcilable Traditions

History of Political Economy · 2022
被引 1
人大 A-ABS 2

中文导读

追踪拉赫曼如何从扩展均衡框架到提出社会嵌入的计划协调制度理论,并揭示其受德国历史学派影响、桥接奥地利学派与德国传统的历程。

Abstract

Abstract Throughout his career, Ludwig M. Lachmann theorized about how economies and societies achieve order in an uncertain world full of heterogeneous agents, heterogeneous production factors, and multilayered subjectivity. This article traces how he began his research agenda by expanding the conventional equilibrium framework of the 1930s to include (potentially diverging) expectations but gradually abandoned price coordination as the sole source of order in an economy. Instead, he set out to formulate an institutional theory of socially embedded plan coordination, which transcended the traditional division between commerce and community. This article illustrates this shift in Lachmann's focus by using two of his neglected German publications. Additionally, it lays out how Lachmann's effort in the “thinking in orders” tradition was principally rooted in his dissatisfaction with approaches to economics that reduced it to a “pure logic of choice.” Lachmann instead conceived of his discipline as being something closer to Max Weber's “socioeconomics,” and in this he was strongly influenced by the German historical school. This article explains how, ironically, this tradition, which historically positioned itself in stark opposition to the Austrian school, has—through the mediation of Lachmann—had considerable influence on the recent history of the Austrian school in the United States.

路德维希·拉赫曼秩序理论制度协调社会嵌入性