Vita

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ABCDEconomy by Luigino Bruni

Blessed be profit (if it´s not the goal)

Published in the weekly Vita of February 13, 2009 

Luigino Bruni´s dictionary continues: a guide to re-reading key words in economic behavior, after breaking down the myths and bursting a few bubbles. Last week, ABCDEconomy began with the word "Happiness".

The nature of profit was always at the center of classic economic theory. For Smith, profit was the compensation of capital; for Marx, it was exploitation; and in the 1900s, for Schumpeter, it was the award for innovation. There is no longer today any trace of these ancient debates in economy handbooks. In fact, if we open them up, we read about the "goal" of business in the first pages - the maximization of profit - profit is considered self-evident, expected, undiscussed. Profit became, therefore, the goal of an entrepreneur´s action under various constraints (unions, ethics, taxes, etc.). 

ABCDEconomy - P as in Profit

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Then, in some (actually, few) of these manuals, we read (often in the footnotes) that other "non-profit" businesses exist which have other goals, different than profit. I am convinced that such a vision, typical of the United States tradition, and distant from the Italian one and in a certain sense from the European tradition, is one of the most astray, dangerous and mistaken of current economic thought. 

Economy books from a few decades ago affirmed that if profit was someone´s goal, he was not an entrepreneur at all but something else: a speculator. It is the speculator that carries out certain instrumental economy activity with the goal of making a profit. For such a person, producing shoes, tomatoes, violins or books is all irrelevant. What´s important is that they bring in money. Instead, (as Luigi Einaudi among others said) an entrepreneur´s goal is not profit, but a project, a business.

For the entrepreneur, profit is essentially a sign that the business, its project, is growing well. In fact, profit is only the tip of the iceberg of wealth or of the added value created by an entrepreneur. Goods, services and jobs are co-essential components of the wealth produced by a business. Profit then, and good economic theory still says so, tends to cancel itself out if the market functions well. Of course, businesses that do not produce wealth or added value do not contribute to the common good. But, I repeat, profit is too little to be the goal of a business, because it is not enough to make it worth it spending one´s life on such a project.  

And when profit truly becomes the goal, it is the whole economy and society that is impoverished, as all economic activity becomes just an instrument without intrinsic value. I am convinced that an economy and an economic system that view the business as a machine for producing wealth tend to stunt the growth of common living because they reduce the space of human passion, of life (if one remembers that the economy is life). History has taught us that civilizations advance when entrepreneurs prevail over speculators, and they regress when the opposite happens. Is this what the current crisis is perhaps telling us?

Next week, the third word: MARKET

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ABCDEconomy by Luigino Bruni

Blessed be profit (if it´s not the goal)

Published in the weekly Vita of February 13, 2009 

Luigino Bruni´s dictionary continues: a guide to re-reading key words in economic behavior, after breaking down the myths and bursting a few bubbles. Last week, ABCDEconomy began with the word "Happiness".

The nature of profit was always at the center of classic economic theory. For Smith, profit was the compensation of capital; for Marx, it was exploitation; and in the 1900s, for Schumpeter, it was the award for innovation. There is no longer today any trace of these ancient debates in economy handbooks. In fact, if we open them up, we read about the "goal" of business in the first pages - the maximization of profit - profit is considered self-evident, expected, undiscussed. Profit became, therefore, the goal of an entrepreneur´s action under various constraints (unions, ethics, taxes, etc.). 

ABCDEconomy - P as in Profit

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ABCDEconomy - "P" as in "Profit"

ABCDEconomy by Luigino Bruni Blessed be profit (if it´s not the goal) Published in the weekly Vita of February 13, 2009  Luigino Bruni´s dictionary continues: a guide to re-reading key words in economic behavior, after breaking down the myths and bursting a few bubbles. Last week, ABCDEcon...
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    [title] => ABCDEconomy - "H" as in "(Public) Happiness"
    [alias] => abcdeconomy-qhq-as-in-qpublic-happinessq
    [introtext] => 

 ABCDEconomy By Luigino Bruni

That science founded on numbers and on happiness

Published in the weekly Vita on 6 February 2009

The large crisis has sent all normally solid pillars of the economy into "tilt".
This is why Vita asked Luigino Bruni, professor at the University of Milano-Bicocca to come up with a dictionary of key terms in the economy to come.
We begin with "H" from "(Public) Happiness"
 

The field of economy arose in 17th Century Italy as the "science of public happiness." The choice of this title for the new science was an expression of a hope, illuministic and reforming. If it had been able to transform the feudal society into a free and commercial society, then the Kingdom of Naples (where these ideas arose), Italy, and Europe would have finally entered into a new season of good living, well-being, civilization, happiness - public happiness.

ABCDEconomy - "H" as in "(Public) Happiness"

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 The adjective "public" said something important: happiness is linked to the common good. Either everyone in a nation is happy or no one is happy, as the happiness of a people is a coordination game. Either everyone cooperates (or almost everybody) and therefore civil and economic development take off, or if someone plays the rascal (as Antonio Genovesi explained), we all remain blocked in various poverty traps.

 The season of public happiness was brief in Europe, to the point that Saint Just, a Parisian revolutionary, affirmed at the end of the 17th century that happiness in Europe was a "new word," as between the middle and the end of the 17th century, the illuministic reformers realized that there were many "rascals" and that public happiness was too ambitious of an objective. So then, in the United States, what was aimed for was the individual right to "the search for happiness," as is written in their Declaration of Independance in 1776. In England, in the same year, Adam Smith refounds political economy on the "wealth of nations", but with respect to public happiness is much less demanding. He said that the search for one´s own individual happiness is enough, and public wealth will create the "invisible hand" of the market, without the need for everyone to enter into personal and deep relationships with other citizens - elements which instead were fundamental in the civil economy of Naples, based on the concept of "mutual assistence".

So then, public happiness was present only at the dawn of modern Europe, a dawn that is still waiting the height of the sun´s rise. Today, happiness is once again returning among economists, and it is returning as "individual happiness." However, there does exist a school of economists - not by chance, Italian economists - who are bringing the topic of public happiness back into the debate over theory and policy, combining the theme human relationships ("relational goods") to the theme. Today, as yesterday, public happiness is a fragil topic because it is exposed to the risk of who wants to be the "rascal." But we need to take on that dare, we cannot be happy with a more "simple" wealth (when it exists and for few). 

Without a public dimension, without belonging to a common destiny, a people, cities will decline. That is why the ancient "public" happiness is a vital word even today.

Next week, "P" as in Profit

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 ABCDEconomy By Luigino Bruni

That science founded on numbers and on happiness

Published in the weekly Vita on 6 February 2009

The large crisis has sent all normally solid pillars of the economy into "tilt".
This is why Vita asked Luigino Bruni, professor at the University of Milano-Bicocca to come up with a dictionary of key terms in the economy to come.
We begin with "H" from "(Public) Happiness"
 

The field of economy arose in 17th Century Italy as the "science of public happiness." The choice of this title for the new science was an expression of a hope, illuministic and reforming. If it had been able to transform the feudal society into a free and commercial society, then the Kingdom of Naples (where these ideas arose), Italy, and Europe would have finally entered into a new season of good living, well-being, civilization, happiness - public happiness.

ABCDEconomy - "H" as in "(Public) Happiness"

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ABCDEconomy - "H" as in "(Public) Happiness"

 ABCDEconomy By Luigino Bruni That science founded on numbers and on happiness Published in the weekly Vita on 6 February 2009 The large crisis has sent all normally solid pillars of the economy into "tilt". This is why Vita asked Luigino Bruni, professor at the University of Milano-Bicocca to ...