Robert Wade on Zombie Ideas, Being inside the World Bank, and the Death of Ethics in Economics after the Marginal Revolution

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    Abstract

    The global economy is at the core of some of the main issues in contemporary International Relations. But how do we understand the global economy and what impact does that have on how we deal with the power politics around it? A fault line seems to have emerged between those who take economic theory seriously and those who denounce it for being part of the problem. Informed by his training as an anthropologist, Robert H. Wade—professor at the LSE—takes a different tack: he bases his engagement with the way in which Adam Smith has been appropriated to advocate for a dominant view of ‘free markets’ on real-world economics and in-depth accounts of insiders. In this Talk, Wade—among others—discusses experimentation in international economic regimes, why the International Financial Institutions don’t fight economic crises, and the powers and perils of being inside the World Bank.
    Original languageEnglish
    JournalTheory Talks
    Issue number72
    Number of pages12
    ISSN2001-4732
    Publication statusPublished - 7 Dec 2015

    Keywords

    • international relations theory
    • International Political Economy
    • World Bank
    • Anthropology
    • Ethics

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