Economic Problems in a Nonlinear World offers a powerful new way to understand the crises of modern capitalism. Drawing on complexity economics, nonlinear dynamics, network theory, and moral political economy, Lawrence R. Kunkel argues that the most urgent economic problems of our time cannot be understood through the old language of equilibrium, efficiency, and isolated market transactions.
Inequality, inflation, debt, market concentration, financial instability, labor disruption, ecological stress, and democratic fragility are not separate problems. They are interconnected outcomes of an adaptive economic system in which feedback loops, thresholds, expectations, institutional trust, and power relations continually reshape one another.
Modern economies do not move smoothly toward balance. They can settle into good or bad attractors. They can generate prosperity or stagnation, resilience or fragility, legitimacy or collapse. Small shocks can cascade through financial networks. Gradual pressures can produce sudden systemic change. Individual choices by firms, households, investors, workers, and governments can create large-scale patterns that no one intended, including bubbles, bank runs, inflation expectations, labor shortages, supply-chain bottlenecks, inequality, and political distrust.
This book challenges the assumption that markets are self-correcting mechanisms detached from moral and institutional life. Economic systems are not merely price systems. They are moral-complex adaptive systems in which material outcomes, social trust, institutional legitimacy, ecological limits, and democratic stability are deeply entangled.
At once analytical and urgent, Economic Problems in a Nonlinear World invites readers to rethink economic governance for an age of instability. It argues that policy must move beyond narrow technical adjustment and toward structural redesign capable of building fairer, more resilient, and more humane economies.
For readers interested in inequality, inflation, debt, markets, crisis, democratic stability, and the future of capitalism, this book offers a compelling framework for understanding why economic life has become so unstable and what kind of institutional imagination is required to repair it.
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Lawrence R. Kunkel is a Game Theory and Complexity Economist. Kunkel's work embodies what might be called an interdisciplinary systems humanism: a fusion of economics, political philosophy, social psychology, chaos theory, and ethical systems into a unified framework for understanding and improving human prosperity and freedom. Mr. Kunkel did his graduate work in the Division of Social Sciences at the University of Chicago (A.M., 1981), where he had matriculation privileges in the Graduate School of Economics, the Booth School of Business, the Law School, and the Committee on Social Thought. Mr. Kunkel served as the research assistant to George J. Stigler, the Charles R. Walgreen Distinguished Service Professor of Economics and the 1982 Nobel Laureate in Economics. He also studied under two other Nobel Prize Winners in Economics, Robert Lucas (1995) and Gary Becker (1992). Kunkel is the author of The Moral Ecology of Collapse: Essays on Inequality, Complexity, and the Instability of Democratic Societies, and Democracy at the Edge of Chaos: Designing Institutions for Nonlinear Times.
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Taschenbuch. Condition: Neu. nach der Bestellung gedruckt Neuware - Printed after ordering - Economic Problems in a Nonlinear World offers a powerful new way to understand the crises of modern capitalism. Drawing on complexity economics, nonlinear dynamics, network theory, and moral political economy, Lawrence R. Kunkel argues that the most urgent economic problems of our time cannot be understood through the old language of equilibrium, efficiency, and isolated market transactions. Inequality, inflation, debt, market concentration, financial instability, labor disruption, ecological stress, and democratic fragility are not separate problems. They are interconnected outcomes of an adaptive economic system in which feedback loops, thresholds, expectations, institutional trust, and power relations continually reshape one another. Modern economies do not move smoothly toward balance. They can settle into good or bad attractors. They can generate prosperity or stagnation, resilience or fragility, legitimacy or collapse. Small shocks can cascade through financial networks. Gradual pressures can produce sudden systemic change. Individual choices by firms, households, investors, workers, and governments can create large-scale patterns that no one intended, including bubbles, bank runs, inflation expectations, labor shortages, supply-chain bottlenecks, inequality, and political distrust. This book challenges the assumption that markets are self-correcting mechanisms detached from moral and institutional life. Economic systems are not merely price systems. They are moral-complex adaptive systems in which material outcomes, social trust, institutional legitimacy, ecological limits, and democratic stability are deeply entangled. At once analytical and urgent, Economic Problems in a Nonlinear World invites readers to rethink economic governance for an age of instability. It argues that policy must move beyond narrow technical adjustment and toward structural redesign capable of building fairer, more resilient, and more humane economies. For readers interested in inequality, inflation, debt, markets, crisis, democratic stability, and the future of capitalism, this book offers a compelling framework for understanding why economic life has become so unstable and what kind of institutional imagination is required to repair it. Seller Inventory # 9798995385776
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Taschenbuch. Condition: Neu. Economic Problems in a Nonlinear World | A Complexity Economics Inquiry into Inequality, Inflation, Debt, Markets, and Crisis | Lawrence R. Kunkel | Taschenbuch | Englisch | 2026 | Lawrence R. Kunkel | EAN 9798995385776 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, 36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr[at]libri[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu Print on Demand. Seller Inventory # 135919358