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<journal-id>2182-7435</journal-id>
<journal-title><![CDATA[Revista Crítica de Ciências Sociais]]></journal-title>
<abbrev-journal-title><![CDATA[Revista Crítica de Ciências Sociais]]></abbrev-journal-title>
<issn>2182-7435</issn>
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<publisher-name><![CDATA[Centro de Estudos Sociais]]></publisher-name>
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<article-id>S2182-74352019000200006</article-id>
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<article-title xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[The Economy as Substantive Reality: The First Meeting of the Portuguese Association of Political Economy. An Introduction]]></article-title>
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<surname><![CDATA[Branco]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Manuel Couret]]></given-names>
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<surname><![CDATA[Martins]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Nuno Ornelas]]></given-names>
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<surname><![CDATA[Santos]]></surname>
<given-names><![CDATA[Ana Cordeiro]]></given-names>
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<institution><![CDATA[,Universidade de Évora Escola de Ciências Sociais ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[Évora ]]></addr-line>
<country>Portugal</country>
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<aff id="AA2">
<institution><![CDATA[,Universidade Católica Portuguesa Católica Porto Business School ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[Porto ]]></addr-line>
<country>Portugal</country>
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<aff id="AA3">
<institution><![CDATA[,Universidade de Coimbra Centro de Estudos Sociais ]]></institution>
<addr-line><![CDATA[Coimbra ]]></addr-line>
<country>Portugal</country>
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<pub-date pub-type="pub">
<day>00</day>
<month>09</month>
<year>2019</year>
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<pub-date pub-type="epub">
<day>00</day>
<month>09</month>
<year>2019</year>
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<numero>119</numero>
<fpage>120</fpage>
<lpage>130</lpage>
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</front><body><![CDATA[ <p align="right"><b>DOSSIER</b></p>     <p><b>The Economy as Substantive Reality: The First Meeting of the Portuguese    Association of Political Economy. An Introduction</b></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><b>Manuel Couret Branco*,&nbsp;Nuno Ornelas Martins**,&nbsp;Ana Cordeiro Santos***</b></p>     <p>* Escola de Ci&ecirc;ncias Sociais, Universidade de &Eacute;vora. Col&eacute;gio    do Esp&iacute;rito Santo, Largo dos Colegiais, 2, Apartado 94, 7002-554 &Eacute;vora,    Portugal&nbsp;<a href="mailto:mbranco@uevora.pt">mbranco@uevora.pt</a></p>     <p>** Cat&oacute;lica Porto Business School, Universidade Cat&oacute;lica Portuguesa.    Rua de Diogo Botelho, 1327, 4169-005 Porto, Portugal&nbsp;<a href="mailto:nmartins@porto.ucp.pt">nmartins@porto.ucp.pt</a></p>     <p>*** Centro de Estudos Sociais da Universidade de Coimbra. Col&eacute;gio de    S. Jer&oacute;nimo, Largo D. Dinis, Apartado 3087, 3000-995 Coimbra, Portugal&nbsp;<a href="mailto:anacsantos@ces.uc.pt">anacsantos@ces.uc.pt</a></p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p>This dossier &ndash; on the economy as substantive reality &ndash; celebrates    the first meeting of the recently created Portuguese Association of Political    Economy, which took place in late January of 2018 in Lisbon, at ISCTE-IUL. The    Association aims to approach the study of the economy from a substantive perspective,    as an existing reality, rather than in terms of a single method, as is usually    the case with mainstream economics, where the latter is understood as the formal    study of the allocation of scarce resources in the face of a variety of potential    uses. This requires an interdisciplinary stance, welcoming the study of the    economy from diverse vantage points and through the use of diverse methods.    The aim of the Association is to provide a forum for researchers who study the    economy from different perspectives, and the theme of its first annual meeting,    the economy as substantive reality, reflects this aim.</p>     <p>In this first meeting around 150 authors from various disciplinary and interdisciplinary    backgrounds presented approximately 90 papers in 23 parallel sessions and three    plenary sessions, approaching the study of the economies in their institutional,    historical and geographical context and through a plurality of methods, in order    to better address underlying social, political, legal, cultural, technological    and ecological aspects.<sup><a href="#1">1</a></sup><a name="top1"></a> The    three articles that make up this dossier include three keynote addresses &ndash;    by Ben Fine, Helena Lopes and Jos&eacute; Lu&iacute;s Garcia &ndash; that adequately    reflect the Association&rsquo;s methodological and epistemological stance and    the challenges ahead. The three book reviews &ndash; by Vicente Ferreira, Jo&atilde;o    Rodrigues and Lu&iacute;sa Veloso &ndash; offer an additional set of political    economy issues that are currently being debated, and the website review &ndash;    by Jos&eacute; Reis &ndash; presents more thoroughly the aims and ambitions    of the Portuguese Association of Political Economy.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Ben Fine&rsquo;s article provides an overview of how the formal conception    of economics became dominant, leading to what he calls economics imperialism,    defined as the dominance of the formal conception of economics, and its extension    into other disciplinary fields. In so doing, Fine defines mainstream economics    in terms of key concepts which he calls the Technical Apparatus (TA1). These    key concepts are the utility function and the production function, which are    applied to the analysis of market supply and demand. Fine argues that drawing    on these key concepts, mainstream economics, and microeconomics in particular,    set itself the problem of deriving supply and demand functions based on the    idea of optimising individuals, a problem that was addressed in the 1930s. Using    these tools, another central problem &ndash; how an aggregate economy arises    out of the activity of optimising individuals in a market &ndash; is dealt with.    This issue was tackled in the 1950s through general equilibrium theory, aimed    at showing that a unique and stable equilibrium exists, and that it is Pareto    efficient. The tools developed within general equilibrium theory constitute    what Fine calls the Technical Architecture (TA2). If we bring together TA1 (utility    and production functions leading to supply and demand functions) and TA2 (general    equilibrium theory) we reach what Fine calls TA<sup>2</sup>, that is, the combination    of the Technical Apparatus and the Technical Architecture. This, according to    Fine, is the core of mainstream economics. Fine also notes that while initially    macroeconomics took centre stage, given the need to address the problem of unemployment,    microeconomics soon became a major field, as part of the process that he terms    economics imperialism. The first phase of economics imperialism consisted in    the application of the core of mainstream economics, defined within microeconomics,    not only to the study of markets, but also to the study of various economic    and social problems, all of which were treated as the outcome of the interaction    of optimising individuals. Gary Becker is the most representative economist    of this phase, which provides the ground for applications in human capital theory,    new economic history and public choice theory.</p>     <p>The stagflation of the 1970s led to the rise of monetarism at the expense of    Keynesianism, and to the definitive establishment of microeconomics (rather    than macroeconomics) as the central field of mainstream economics. This meant    that various fields of applied economics had to be reformulated in terms of    the now dominant microeconomic theory, including macroeconomics itself and related    fields like development economics. Despite orthodox Keynesian reactions, the    acceptance of the dominance of microeconomics was also accompanied by a restauration    of Keynesianism, through the recognition of market imperfections, asymmetric    information, and so on. This in turn led to the emergence of a second stage    of economics imperialism, which viewed economic and social problems (including    those outside the sphere of the market) as a response to market imperfections,    within fields such as new economic sociology, new welfare economics, new institutional    economics, new economic history, and new approaches to growth and development.    But it is still the core framework of microeconomics that, together with the    idea of market imperfections, is being applied to every domain of economic and    social reality, and which is to be explained in terms of optimising individuals.</p>     <p>The aftermath of the 2007-2008 Global Financial Crisis brings us to a third    stage of economics imperialism. According to Fine, this phase is characterised    by the suspension of the exclusive concern with optimisation, which can now    be combined with other motivations or constraints besides those present in a    market-oriented logic, while also adopting empirically-oriented methods through    the increasing presence of econometrics. Still according to Fine, suspension    of the exclusive concern with optimisation is possible only because the core    principles of microeconomics are now sufficiently well established, otherwise    suspension would be viewed with suspicion within mainstream economics. Fine    also contrasts his assessment of mainstream economics with that of other contributors,    such as Tony Lawson and David Colander. Lawson argues that mainstream economics    cannot be characterised in terms of any one substantive theory, but rather in    terms of its adherence to a mathematical-deductivist methodology. Such a view    tends to relegate the analysis of the theoretical framework of mainstream economics    to a secondary position, since it is not its key feature. In contrast to this    perspective, Fine contends that there is a core theoretical framework, which    drives the successive stages of economics imperialism he describes. Fine also    criticises Colander&rsquo;s idea that mainstream economics will disintegrate    from the outside as new methods are brought in from other social sciences, and    he argues that it is the current state of suspension that leads to the belief    that the theoretical core of mainstream economics does not exist, or is in the    process of disintegrating.</p>     <p>Helena Lopes revisits the debate on the political function of work. The motivation    for this is the dominance of the method and theoretical framework of mainstream    economics &ndash; what Fine calls Technical Apparatus (TA1). Lopes argues that    the increasing dominance of neoclassical economics has led to the progressive    eradication of the political dimension in analysis of work, particularly of    the agency theory of the firm, with its exclusive focus on the optimising individual    in the workplace. But work is an inherently collective activity with a significant    emancipatory and transformational potential, and thus inherently political and    moral.</p>     <p>Work is an intrinsically collective activity. Within the context of the firm,    work is a collective endeavour requiring cooperation and involving interpersonal    relations. This is in contrast to the view that takes instrumental and individual    motivations as the main, if not the sole, drivers of human behaviour, as claimed    by the neoclassical agency theory of the firm or by the social philosophies    that obliterate the political dimension of work by focusing on their technical    aspects, such as the one put forward by Hannah Arendt. By denying the collective    nature of work, these accounts eschew the political and moral nature of firms.    By conceiving of work as a merely technical matter or an instrumental activity,    these accounts disregard power relations &ndash; i.e., the asymmetric nature    of work relations &ndash; and the role of interpersonal interactions &ndash;    i.e., interactions that engage workers in a way that allows them to exercise    virtue and character by permitting them to act in accordance with their own    morality.</p>     <p>Work is a complex and collective productive endeavour requiring a high level    of interdependence between workers and involving not only a shared understanding    of the common goal but also a personal commitment towards the pursuit of that    goal, despite inevitable conflicts of interests. It also involves engaging in    interpersonal interactions, which generate affective states that ground and    sustain norms of cooperation. Instead of autonomous and independent individuals,    workers are social and interdependent and relate to each other as distinct,    unique and moral individuals, who develop affective states and make evaluative    judgments about their own behaviour and that of others. To echo Adam Smith&rsquo;s    concept of sympathy, as put forward in his <i>Theory of Moral Sentiments</i>,    the ability to feel empathy with others is the basis of human behaviour and    the trigger of cooperation, and what ultimately sustains work as well as other    joint endeavours.</p>     <p>Invoking Marx, Lopes claims that work can be emancipatory. However, in order    to realise this political function, workers must have class consciousness, i.e.,    they have to be aware of their subordinated position so as to collectively strive    for a more balanced power relation. Historically, this has been achieved through    class struggle resulting in the creation of collective entities, such as trade    unions and workers&rsquo; representative bodies within the firm, thus counterbalancing    the control managers have over the organisation of labour and over workers.</p>     <p>However, over the last four decades neoliberal policies have undermined the    balance of power between labour and capital. The agency theory of the firm has    been instrumental in this regard, grounding at the theoretical level the elimination    of collective forms of worker participation in the governance of the firm. This    has been pursued through a conception of the firm as a set of principal-agent    contracts and its governance as a set of incentive structures that align the    interests of principals and agents, i.e., those of shareholders and managers,    on the one hand, and of managers and workers, on the other. This view has underpinned    the rise of the maximisation of share-value as the dominant criterion of good    governance. From being a centre of production and employment, the firm has increasingly    become a centre for the management of a portfolio of material and financial    assets.</p>     <p>This has led to the quantification of work. Drawing on Supiot&rsquo;s &ldquo;governance    of work by numbers&rdquo;, Lopes underlines the role of quantified objectives,    targets and performance appraisals, on the basis of which pecuniary incentive    schemes have been defined. This fact has individualised and de-moralised work    processes and de-politicised the workplace, instilling behaviours in line with    the normative model of <i>homo economicus</i>, i.e., rational and self-interested    human action. In so doing it compromised the workers&rsquo; disposition toward    collective action and thus the political function of work.</p>     <p>Individualistic and quantitative modes of management have undermined the moral    and political dimensions of work. As a result, we have witnessed the promotion    of competitive behaviours at the expense of cooperation, the disruption of solidarities    and mutual help, and the naturalisation of <i>homo economicus</i> as an acceptable    and undisputable normative model of human action, to the detriment of other    social contexts. In response, Lopes proposes the democratisation of firms &ndash;    for example through a return to co-determination forms of governance &ndash;    as a means to enhance the moral and political dispositions of citizens for the    betterment of workers and community life, and as a way of challenging our present,    neoliberal times.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>Jos&eacute; Lu&iacute;s Garcia&rsquo;s article also examines the present neoliberal    era. He does so by way of a critical analysis of innovation, something which    has become a fundamental pillar of contemporary neoliberal discourse whose main    objective is to legitimise the increase of profits and the process of knowledge    commodification. On the other hand, the use of the term innovation to describe    transformations in the economy and society serves to promote the notion that    such transformations institute an order that is superior to that which existed    before it. This term also contributes to legitimise these transformations in    the eyes of citizens, including the financial and institutional support received    from the State, despite the increase in social inequalities, technological unemployment,    environmental destruction, accidents and health risks.</p>     <p>Garcia&rsquo;s text is organised into four sections. The first presents the    context of the explosion of innovation, its antecedents and the emergence of    the notion of the commercialisation of technological innovation; the second    shows the shift from a negative view, which lasted until the beginnings of modernity,    to a favourable one in the twentieth century; the third recaptures Polanyi&rsquo;s    notion of the subordination of society to the market logic; and the fourth,    still following Polanyi, argues that the dis-embedment of innovation promoted    by neoliberal discourse has turned it into a new, fictitious commodity, as it    had previously done with land and labour, for example.</p>     <p>In the first section of his article, Jos&eacute; Lu&iacute;s Garcia argues    that at the end of the twentieth century, on the basis of the Schumpeterian    idea that development stems from creative destruction, that is, innovation,    the State strongly supported innovation, funding it as a priority with commercial    potential. In fact, innovation has itself become the subject of funded research    in university and scientific circles.</p>     <p>In the second section Garcia explains how in the twentieth century, and contrary    to what had been the case until then, a positive view of the new emerged. This    recent prestige of novelty contributed to an uncritical acceptance of innovation.    Innovation, and its corollary of the self-regulated market, presented itself    as a natural consequence of evolution, a progressive movement towards human    greatness. As he adds, technology and the market would become the new dynamos    of history.</p>     <p>In the third section Garcia recovers Karl Polanyi&rsquo;s thesis that economic    liberalism subordinates society to its logic and consequently produces innovation    that is dis-embedded from society. Thus, whereas the economic order was once    merely one of the functions of the social order, in societies subject to a market    economy the tendency became for the social order to be subject to market logic.    In this process, goods that were not produced to be bought or sold acquired    exchange value and were converted into fictitious goods.</p>     <p>The fourth section argues that, as a result of the hegemony of the market idea,    innovation itself became a fictitious commodity, in line with Polanyi&rsquo;s    view. The main characteristic of this new fictitious commodity is that its main    objective is basically to generate more profit, dissociating itself from any    other purposes. Under this understanding of innovation, the recent evolution    of the economy and of society can then be interpreted as the transition from    a &ldquo;labour economy&rdquo; to a &ldquo;knowledge economy&rdquo;, to a cognitive    capitalism.</p>     <p>Jos&eacute; Lu&iacute;s Garcia then describes three essential facets of innovation    as they have developed since the end of the twentieth century. First, innovation    has played a key role in creating economic value and fine-tuning the process    of competition whereby researchers became primarily commodity producers. Second,    as a result of the dominant logic of innovation, not only have vast areas of    knowledge been subjected to the logic of commodification, but many other domains    potentially beneficial for humanity have also become marginalised for not being    commercial enough. Among these, according to Garcia, are fundamental research,    the humanities, various environmental issues, uncertainties associated with    technologies, alternative forms of agriculture and the improvement in health    and living conditions of the most deprived populations. Finally, the third aspect    of innovation concerns its aesthetic dimension, with value creation being associated    with marketing and advertising, which Garcia calls pseudo-innovation.</p>     <p>The article concludes that, contrary to the neoliberal discourse, innovation    should not be guided solely by commercial ends, but instead seek to achieve    socially equitable and ecologically sustainable goals and be evaluated according    to ethical, political, social and environmental standards. In short, it should    take up a political economy approach.</p>     <p>In the book review section, Vicente Ferreira offers an account of Adam Tooze&rsquo;s    <i>Crashed: How a Decade of Financial Crises Changed the World</i>. He notes    the author&rsquo;s assessment of how initially the focus was misplaced on commercial    imbalances rather than on financial risks, and critically examines the competing    responses to the 2007-2008 crisis in the United States and the European Union,    the way in which austerity was construed so as to pass the costs on to the overall    population, China&rsquo;s response, and the economic and political consequences    of the crisis.</p>     <p>Jo&atilde;o Rodrigues reviews Robert Kutter&rsquo;s <i>Can Democracy Survive    Global Capitalism?</i>, explaining the author&rsquo;s intellectual and professional    background and the way in which he approaches the history of democracy and its    crises, including the centrality of class struggle and the need for a political    economy approach that is not exclusively economic, nor merely political. The    connections between capitalism and democracy and their implications for each    type (or variety) of capitalism are also discussed. Noting the difficulties    in reconciling capitalism and democracy, Rodrigues suggests an approach that    draws on the teachings of Karl Marx, John Maynard Keynes and Karl Polanyi.</p>     ]]></body>
<body><![CDATA[<p>In her review of <i>O valor de tudo. Fazer e tirar na economia global</i> &ndash;    a Portuguese translation of Mariana Mazzucato&rsquo;s <i>The Value of Everything:    Making and Taking in the Global Economy</i> &ndash;, Lu&iacute;sa Veloso comments    on the author&rsquo;s double emphasis on economic phenomena and economic thought,    as well as on her explanation of the impact of economic ideas on reality. The    notion of value is scrutinised as a key concept throughout the history of economic    thought, and attention is paid to the way in which markets are constructed and    so should not be seen as a given. Noting that social phenomena are not always    sufficiently explained in all their complexity, Veloso also points out the author&rsquo;s    effort to reach a larger audience through careful explanation of expressions    commonly used in economics.</p>     <p>Finally, in the website review section, Jos&eacute; Reis, the president of    the Portuguese Association of Political Economy, offers a detailed introduction    to the Association&rsquo;s website. Reis describes the Association&rsquo;s mission,    its goals and achievements, including the first annual meeting, and many other    events and news pertaining to the Portuguese Association as well as its sister    Associations around the world.</p>     <p>&nbsp;</p>     <p><b>NOTAS</b></p>     <p><Sup><a name="1"></a><a href="#top1">1</a></Sup> &nbsp;See <a href="https://economiapolitica.pt/eventos/1o-encontro-anual-de-economia-politica" target="_blank">https://economiapolitica.pt/eventos/1o-encontro-anual-de-economia-politica</a>.</p>      ]]></body>
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