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The Economics of Public Choice

Summary

The course is aimed at providing a basic overview of the problems of public choice theory.
The course includes an analysis of voting behavior, the behavior of elected representatives, interest groups, and bureaucracy.
The course employs a rational choice model and treats political market actors as traditional "shoppers" or
"sellers", the course therefore favours an economic way of thinking about political markets.
The economic way of thinking about political markets and collective action allows the analysis of political and other collective institutions and also to assess the appropriateness of the settings of these institutions. The course thus partly covers the field of constitutional and institutional economics. The course also provides basic and key insights into economic policymaking in representative democracies, taking into account the rational actor model. Thus, it also deals with the inferior effects of implemented economic policies. Graduates of the course should be able to apply economic reasoning in a non-market and political environment markets at an intermediate level.

Literature

HILLMAN, Arye L. Public finance and public policy: responsibilities and limitations of government. 2nd ed. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0521738057.

Advised literature

PERSSON, Torsten a Guido TABELLINI. 2000. Political Economics: Explaining Economic Policy. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2000. ISBN 0-262-16195-8.


Language of instruction čeština, čeština
Code 114-0442
Abbreviation EVV
Course title The Economics of Public Choice
Coordinating department Department of Economics
Course coordinator doc. Ing. Jan Janků, Ph.D.