Quick question from an inexperienced undergraduate urban planning student:
What does everyone think about inframarginal economics? I encountered
Xiaokai Yang's book _Economics: New Classical Versus Neoclassical
Frameworks_ when I was mulling around the bookstore a couple weeks ago. In
it the author explains economic growth, urbanization, business cycles, other
major problems of economics using "network division of labor" techniques.
Very different from my microeconomics courses! Is this the "future" of
economics? James Buchanan seems to be very interested since he chairs their
workshop program according to http://www.inframarginal.com. So what do all
of you think?

Regards,

Ben

Ben Berry
University of Southern California
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
p/ 213.764.1912

I cannot become modest; too many things burn in me; the old solutions are
falling apart; nothing has been done yet with the new ones. So I begin,
everywhere at once, as if I had a century ahead of me.
                                                  --Elias Canetti


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