Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Knowledge and Decisions

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Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
1980

ISBN
  
978-0465037360

Originally published
  
1980

Page count
  
422 (hardcover)

Publisher
  
Basic Books

4.4/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Pages
  
422 (hardcover)

OCLC
  
35768274

Author
  
Thomas Sowell

Genre
  
Non-fiction

Preceded by
  
Race and Economics

Knowledge and Decisions t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcSJqRv0UMW0AJpKBs

Similar
  
Thomas Sowell books, Decision-making books, Non-fiction books

Thomas sowell knowledge and decisions


Knowledge and Decisions is a non-fiction book by American economist Thomas Sowell. The book was initially published in 1980 by Basic Books and reissued in 1996.

Contents

Overview

Sowell explicates social and economic knowledge and how it is transmitted through the many facets of society, and how that transmission affects decisions made. The book's central theme is drawn from F.A. Hayek's article "The Use of Knowledge in Society."

Emphatically, Sowell repeatedly rejects the popular tendency to put economic and political decisions and their results in moral terms. Doing so, he argues, ignores the tradeoffs and limitations inherent in every economic system and society. Consistent with his established laissez-faire viewpoints, Sowell also indicts price controls (such as rent control, minimum wage, price fixing, and subsidies) as interfering in the implicit communication between consumers and producers necessary to optimize the choices of each. The fact that some industries or government agencies seem particularly incompetent or corrupt over many turnovers of their staff, he argues, is not bad people performing the duties but of rational people acting in their own interests responding to whatever incentives have been established in the system.

The last section of the book deals with intellectuals, those whose profession is the distribution of ideas. Sowell questions the popular unwavering faith in the expert intellectual and "articulated rationality" for "solutions" to economic or political problems. He explains that through intellectuals government agencies such as the United States Environmental Protection Agency and National Institutes of Health have become more numerous and more powerful. Sowell explains that agencies make more laws than Congress does, but the agencies are insulated from any sort of consequences of their decisions because the officials are not even elected. That has the effect of creating a larger divide between people who make decisions and those who experience the consequences.

Sowell also dwells on the recurrent unintended consequences of many intellectual decisions. Consequently, Sowell advocates a decentralizing of the decisions by allowing people to make economic choices for themselves rather than assuming that non-elected intellectuals at centralized planning agencies will make better decisions.

References

Knowledge and Decisions Wikipedia