Incentives Matter: Examining the Problematic Nature of Public Aid in the United States

Date

2016

Authors

Tuszynski, Meg Patrick

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Abstract

In chapter 1, I argue that the institutional and constitutional context within which order emerges has a strong impact on the structure of that order. I examine the evolution of public-assistance policy in the United States to understand key dynamics of a perverse emergent order. Traditionally, studies of spontaneous social orders have not examined how order emerges within a framework that includes significant government actors (Hebert and Wagner 2013 is a notable exception). I argue that the public-assistance system as it exists in the United States is a perverse emergent order, with both public and private actors playing key roles in the creation of this system.

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Keywords

Economics, Austrian Economics, Emergent order, Polycentricity, Public aid, Public Choice, Redistribution

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