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Book Synopsis

Global financial capitalism has eroded the moral economy on which all economic exchanges ultimately depend. The principles of reciprocity, responsibility and redistribution, which for centuries defined the market place, have been increasingly pushed aside by a growth model that places the pursuit of profit above all else.

Luigino Bruni and Stefano Zamagni draw on a rich Italian tradition of civic humanism to advocate a more well-mannered type of economic market – a civil economy – one that places well-being, virtue and the common good alongside more familiar economic goals. They provide a succinct introduction to the civil economy approach and outline the thought and ideas of some of its pioneers and main representatives. The many different fields of application of the civil economy, from the determination of gross domestic product to the management of common goods, from welfare to the organization of production and consumption, are considered.

Unlike many post-growth or degrowth movements, rather than seek to replace the market, civil economy seeks to find solutions to social problems within the market, while maximizing human values and minimizing government intervention. It is a distinct and valuable approach, and one that offers individuals, corporations and governments a framework for a humane and socially accountable, yet productive and competitive, system of markets.



Trade Review

Every so often, one comes across a book which tells you things you already know with such lucidity and insight that it becomes a fresh window onto the subject. Bruni and Zamagni’s work brings a persuasive freshness in their careful location of their vision for a better economy within a long-established and predominantly Italian tradition dating back to Antonio Genovesi in the eighteenth century ... in 147 pages, they have brought together one of the most effective critiques of our current economic orthodoxies, and this effectiveness stems in large part from their refusal to resort to rhetorical exaggerations or zero-sum games between competing ideas. Their critique is the more devastating for being expressed with such generosity. Bruni and Zamagni have shown here that alternatives to current economic orthodoxy do not have to be conjured up out of thin air and that there has always been, in the Italian tradition they describe, a foundation on which a better and more human economic environment could be constructed ... Civil Economy is lucid and eminently readable – detailed enough to be convincing and short enough to be widely read.

-- Malcolm Brown, Studies in Christian Ethics

Table of Contents

1. What is Civil Economy?

Part I: History
2. The Cornerstones: Antonio Genovesi and Giacinto Dragonetti
3. Good Wealth: John Ruskin
4. Rents: Achille Loria
5. The “Catholic” Spirit of Capitalism: Amintore Fanfani

Part II: Ideas
6. Why GDP is Not Enough
7. Common Goods
8. Towards Civil Welfare
9. Socially Responsible Companies and Consumers
Epilogue

Civil Economy: Another Idea of the Market

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    A Paperback / softback by Professor Luigino Bruni, Professor Stefano Zamagni

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      View other formats and editions of Civil Economy: Another Idea of the Market by Professor Luigino Bruni

      Publisher: Agenda Publishing
      Publication Date: 30/10/2016
      ISBN13: 9781911116004, 978-1911116004
      ISBN10: 1911116002

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Global financial capitalism has eroded the moral economy on which all economic exchanges ultimately depend. The principles of reciprocity, responsibility and redistribution, which for centuries defined the market place, have been increasingly pushed aside by a growth model that places the pursuit of profit above all else.

      Luigino Bruni and Stefano Zamagni draw on a rich Italian tradition of civic humanism to advocate a more well-mannered type of economic market – a civil economy – one that places well-being, virtue and the common good alongside more familiar economic goals. They provide a succinct introduction to the civil economy approach and outline the thought and ideas of some of its pioneers and main representatives. The many different fields of application of the civil economy, from the determination of gross domestic product to the management of common goods, from welfare to the organization of production and consumption, are considered.

      Unlike many post-growth or degrowth movements, rather than seek to replace the market, civil economy seeks to find solutions to social problems within the market, while maximizing human values and minimizing government intervention. It is a distinct and valuable approach, and one that offers individuals, corporations and governments a framework for a humane and socially accountable, yet productive and competitive, system of markets.



      Trade Review

      Every so often, one comes across a book which tells you things you already know with such lucidity and insight that it becomes a fresh window onto the subject. Bruni and Zamagni’s work brings a persuasive freshness in their careful location of their vision for a better economy within a long-established and predominantly Italian tradition dating back to Antonio Genovesi in the eighteenth century ... in 147 pages, they have brought together one of the most effective critiques of our current economic orthodoxies, and this effectiveness stems in large part from their refusal to resort to rhetorical exaggerations or zero-sum games between competing ideas. Their critique is the more devastating for being expressed with such generosity. Bruni and Zamagni have shown here that alternatives to current economic orthodoxy do not have to be conjured up out of thin air and that there has always been, in the Italian tradition they describe, a foundation on which a better and more human economic environment could be constructed ... Civil Economy is lucid and eminently readable – detailed enough to be convincing and short enough to be widely read.

      -- Malcolm Brown, Studies in Christian Ethics

      Table of Contents

      1. What is Civil Economy?

      Part I: History
      2. The Cornerstones: Antonio Genovesi and Giacinto Dragonetti
      3. Good Wealth: John Ruskin
      4. Rents: Achille Loria
      5. The “Catholic” Spirit of Capitalism: Amintore Fanfani

      Part II: Ideas
      6. Why GDP is Not Enough
      7. Common Goods
      8. Towards Civil Welfare
      9. Socially Responsible Companies and Consumers
      Epilogue

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