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Novel externalities

Version 2 2024-03-13, 13:26
Version 1 2024-03-01, 12:39
journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-13, 13:26 authored by Nick CowenNick Cowen, Eric Schliesser

Novel externalities are social activities for which the emerging cost (or benefit) of the spillover is unknown and must be discovered. Negative novel externalities have regained international salience following the COVID-19 pandemic. Such cases frequently are invoked as evidence of the limits of liberal political economy for dealing with public emergencies. Through a re-reading of classical political economy with the modern state’s confrontation with infectious disease in mind, we defend the comparative efficacy of liberal democracy against authoritarian alternatives for coping with these social problems. Effective responses to novel externalities require producing and updating trustworthy public information and an independent scientific community to validate and interpret it. Those epistemic capacities are prevalent in liberal democratic regimes with multiple sources of political power, an independent civil society, and practices of academic freedom. Our analysis highlights the theoretical value of polycentrism and self-governance beyond their more familiar role of increasing accountability and competition in the provision of local public goods and facilitating effective national policy.

History

School affiliated with

  • School of Social and Political Sciences (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Public Choice

Publisher

Springer

ISSN

0048-5829

eISSN

1573-7101

Date Submitted

2023-06-01

Date Accepted

2023-05-18

Date of First Publication

2023-06-08

Date of Final Publication

2024-01-01

Date Document First Uploaded

2023-05-25

ePrints ID

54848

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