Pandemic Politics within a System of Entangled Political Economy

Marta Podemska-Mikluch, R. Wagner
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The point of our paper is not to offer some critique of particular policy measures but to advance our understanding of how democratic societies operate in stressful times.\nIt seems patently clear that Covid-19 presents some difficult problems of public health regarding a sometimes-lethal contagious disease that spreads through personal interaction. Times of crisis like that which many people think Covid-19 presents surely amplifies the challenges that policy formation presents to democratic societies. Our interest in this paper, however, lies not in selecting among different policies that people have proposed to combat the pandemic. Rather, we explore the properties of different organizational arrangements through which contestation among political, economic, and scientific entities influence the emergence of societal outcomes. To do this, we adopt the approach of entangled political economy which Wagner (2016) summarizes. Entangled political economy contrasts with the standard notion of additive political economy. With additive political economy, political action is independent of economic action as is entailed in the presumption that political action offsets market failures. In contrast, with entangled political activity there is continual interaction between political and economic entities, sometimes to mutual advantage and sometimes not, but politics and economics do not represent distinct realms of activity in any case.\nAt the core of our analysis lies recognition of the wisdom of Frank Knight’s oft-made remark that our most severe problem with knowledge does not lie in what we don’t know but rather lies in what we know that isn’t true. There might well be one best response to Covid-19, but there is no universal agreement about what that response might be. Many people claim to know what’s best, and not all of them can be right. In the face of such systemic ignorance, there is no effective option to relying on processes of social contestation to winnow down the possibilities. Hence, we focus on contestation within a policy-making processes that entails interaction among political, economic, and scientific entities. That contestation, moreover, cuts across different linguistic communities. The scientific community mostly uses languages grounded in concepts and categories of such fields as molecular biology, epidemiology, virology, and statistics. The commercial or economic community mostly works with languages grounded in revenue, costs, and profits. The political community mostly works with languages grounded in public perception and the reduction of technical categories and concepts to those that seem intuitively reasonable or plausible.\nThe social process of contestation thus resembles a three-ring circus where activity in the main political ring is shaped by activities undertaken within the commercial and scientific rings, and with that shaping running in both directions. We examine the societal impact of Covid-19 from the perspective of entangled political economy which construes societies as dense and complex ecologies of interacting enterprises. The framework of entangled political economy is built on recognition of the dispersed nature of knowledge. Within this analytical framework, policy is not so much an object of choice by some ruling coalition as it is an emergent outcome of interaction among interested participants as shaped through an organizationally structured process of political competition (Podemska-Mikluch 2014).\nThe framework of entangled political economy recalls the formulations by two scholarly giants associated with the University of Chicago in the 1930 s, Frank H. Knight (1933) and Harold D. Lasswell (1936), each of whom articulated nearly congruent visions of the domains of economics and politics, and with nearly a century later this vision now carrying the label entangled political economy. In The Economic Organization, Knight (1933) explained that any society will have to address the same set of questions: what will be produced, how it will be produced, and how much of that output different people will receive. In very small societies, these decisions might be made explicitly through some procedure of collective choice. In large societies, such explicit choice is impossible. Nonetheless, those three sets of decisions will be necessary in even the largest of societies. Knight’s point was simply that the making of such decisions was present in the very operation of the society, even though there might be innumerable processes for reaching such decisions. For Lasswell (1936), politics addressed questions of who gets what, when they get it, and how they get it. It’s plain to see that what Wagner (2016) describes as entangled political economy is congruent with Knight’s and Lasswell’s formulations of the problems that are common to all societies.\nFurthermore, entangled political economy suggests that both market and political entities are similar in being led by leaders who seek to be successful at what they do. 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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This essay uses entangled political economy to explore how concerns over Covid-19 have influenced conduct within the public square. Entangled political economy represents a merging of ideas that Frank Knight (1933) and Harold Lasswell (1936) set forth to indicate that politics and economics dealt with the same societal material. We explore the relationship between entanglement and public reason within a context of Michael Polanyi’s (1962) conceptualization of a Republic of Science. The point of our paper is not to offer some critique of particular policy measures but to advance our understanding of how democratic societies operate in stressful times. It seems patently clear that Covid-19 presents some difficult problems of public health regarding a sometimes-lethal contagious disease that spreads through personal interaction. Times of crisis like that which many people think Covid-19 presents surely amplifies the challenges that policy formation presents to democratic societies. Our interest in this paper, however, lies not in selecting among different policies that people have proposed to combat the pandemic. Rather, we explore the properties of different organizational arrangements through which contestation among political, economic, and scientific entities influence the emergence of societal outcomes. To do this, we adopt the approach of entangled political economy which Wagner (2016) summarizes. Entangled political economy contrasts with the standard notion of additive political economy. With additive political economy, political action is independent of economic action as is entailed in the presumption that political action offsets market failures. In contrast, with entangled political activity there is continual interaction between political and economic entities, sometimes to mutual advantage and sometimes not, but politics and economics do not represent distinct realms of activity in any case. At the core of our analysis lies recognition of the wisdom of Frank Knight’s oft-made remark that our most severe problem with knowledge does not lie in what we don’t know but rather lies in what we know that isn’t true. There might well be one best response to Covid-19, but there is no universal agreement about what that response might be. Many people claim to know what’s best, and not all of them can be right. In the face of such systemic ignorance, there is no effective option to relying on processes of social contestation to winnow down the possibilities. Hence, we focus on contestation within a policy-making processes that entails interaction among political, economic, and scientific entities. That contestation, moreover, cuts across different linguistic communities. The scientific community mostly uses languages grounded in concepts and categories of such fields as molecular biology, epidemiology, virology, and statistics. The commercial or economic community mostly works with languages grounded in revenue, costs, and profits. The political community mostly works with languages grounded in public perception and the reduction of technical categories and concepts to those that seem intuitively reasonable or plausible. The social process of contestation thus resembles a three-ring circus where activity in the main political ring is shaped by activities undertaken within the commercial and scientific rings, and with that shaping running in both directions. We examine the societal impact of Covid-19 from the perspective of entangled political economy which construes societies as dense and complex ecologies of interacting enterprises. The framework of entangled political economy is built on recognition of the dispersed nature of knowledge. Within this analytical framework, policy is not so much an object of choice by some ruling coalition as it is an emergent outcome of interaction among interested participants as shaped through an organizationally structured process of political competition (Podemska-Mikluch 2014). The framework of entangled political economy recalls the formulations by two scholarly giants associated with the University of Chicago in the 1930 s, Frank H. Knight (1933) and Harold D. Lasswell (1936), each of whom articulated nearly congruent visions of the domains of economics and politics, and with nearly a century later this vision now carrying the label entangled political economy. In The Economic Organization, Knight (1933) explained that any society will have to address the same set of questions: what will be produced, how it will be produced, and how much of that output different people will receive. In very small societies, these decisions might be made explicitly through some procedure of collective choice. In large societies, such explicit choice is impossible. Nonetheless, those three sets of decisions will be necessary in even the largest of societies. Knight’s point was simply that the making of such decisions was present in the very operation of the society, even though there might be innumerable processes for reaching such decisions. For Lasswell (1936), politics addressed questions of who gets what, when they get it, and how they get it. It’s plain to see that what Wagner (2016) describes as entangled political economy is congruent with Knight’s and Lasswell’s formulations of the problems that are common to all societies. Furthermore, entangled political economy suggests that both market and political entities are similar in being led by leaders who seek to be successful at what they do. One significant difference between political and market enterprises is that there exists a market for ownership shares in market enterprises which means that those enterprises will command market value. This contrast between the two categories of enterprise influences the types of interaction that occur between those enterprises. All the same, what we denote as policy outcomes emerge through processes of contestation across the three rings. How the outcomes of that contestation might measure up against some imagined standard of societal welfare is something about which many people might have opinion, only there is no god-like vantage point like Mount Olympus from which correct or true judgment might be rendered. We open the paper with an overview of the role the concept of public goods and public reason has played in advancing lines of demarcation between political and commercial activity. We then contrast this effort at demarcation with the efforts of Elinor Ostrom (1990) and her associates to explain how people often are able to overcome the public goods problems they face without resorting to some arbitrary imposition of power to resolve theoretical impasses. Following this, we contrast the assembly of knowledge within an idealized setting of a Republic of Science (Polanyi 1951; 1962) with recognition that science and politics are inescapably entangled in settings like that which Covid-19 presents. We close by reflecting on how ideas from entangled political economy might alter the contributions social sciences might make to political processes.
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纠缠政治经济体系中的流行病政治
本文使用纠缠的政治经济学来探讨对Covid-19的担忧如何影响公共广场内的行为。纠缠的政治经济学代表了弗兰克·奈特(Frank Knight, 1933)和哈罗德·拉斯韦尔(Harold Lasswell, 1936)提出的观点的融合,表明政治和经济学处理的是相同的社会材料。我们在迈克尔·波兰尼(1962)科学共和国概念化的背景下探讨纠缠与公共理性之间的关系。我们这篇论文的重点不是对特定的政策措施提出一些批评,而是促进我们对民主社会在紧张时期如何运作的理解。很明显,Covid-19提出了一些公共卫生难题,这是一种有时致命的传染病,通过人际互动传播。像许多人认为Covid-19所带来的危机时期,肯定会放大政策形成对民主社会的挑战。然而,我们对本文的兴趣不在于从人们提出的防治这一流行病的不同政策中进行选择。相反,我们探索了不同组织安排的属性,通过这些组织安排,政治、经济和科学实体之间的争论影响了社会结果的出现。为此,我们采用了瓦格纳(Wagner, 2016)总结的纠缠政治经济学方法。纠缠型政治经济学与累加型政治经济学的标准概念形成对比。在加法政治经济学中,政治行动独立于经济行动,因为政治行动抵消了市场失灵的假设。相比之下,在纠缠的政治活动中,政治和经济实体之间存在着持续的互动,有时是互利的,有时不是,但政治和经济在任何情况下都不代表不同的活动领域。我们分析的核心在于承认弗兰克·奈特(Frank Knight)常说的一句话的智慧:我们最严重的知识问题不在于我们不知道的东西,而在于我们知道的不真实的东西。对Covid-19可能有一种最佳应对措施,但对于这种应对措施可能是什么,人们没有普遍的共识。许多人声称知道什么是最好的,但并非所有人都是正确的。面对这种系统性的无知,除了依靠社会争论的过程来筛选可能性之外,没有任何有效的选择。因此,我们将重点放在需要政治、经济和科学实体之间相互作用的决策过程中的争论。此外,这种争论跨越了不同的语言群体。科学界使用的语言大多基于分子生物学、流行病学、病毒学和统计学等领域的概念和类别。商业或经济社区主要使用基于收入、成本和利润的语言。政治团体的工作大多是基于公众认知的语言,并将技术类别和概念简化为直觉上合理或可信的。因此,争论的社会过程就像一个三环马戏团,主要政治圈的活动受到商业和科学圈内活动的影响,这种影响是双向的。我们从纠缠的政治经济学的角度考察了Covid-19的社会影响,该观点将社会解释为相互作用的企业的密集而复杂的生态。纠缠政治经济学的框架是建立在认识到知识的分散性的基础上的。在这个分析框架内,政策与其说是某个执政联盟的选择对象,不如说是通过政治竞争的组织结构过程形成的利益参与者之间相互作用的新结果(Podemska-Mikluch 2014)。纠缠政治经济学的框架让人想起了20世纪30年代与芝加哥大学有关的两位学术巨头弗兰克·h·奈特(Frank H. Knight, 1933)和哈罗德·d·拉斯韦尔(Harold D. laswell, 1936)的构想,他们两人都对经济学和政治领域提出了几乎一致的观点,近一个世纪后,这种观点现在被贴上了纠缠政治经济学的标签。在《经济组织》(The Economic Organization, 1933)一书中,奈特解释说,任何社会都必须解决同样的一系列问题:生产什么,如何生产,以及不同的人将获得多少产出。在非常小的社会中,这些决定可能是通过一些集体选择的程序明确做出的。在大型社会中,这种明确的选择是不可能的。尽管如此,即使在最大的社会中,这三套决定也是必要的。
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Journal of Contextual Economics-Schmollers Jahrbuch
Journal of Contextual Economics-Schmollers Jahrbuch Social Sciences-Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
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