“ The Coronavirus is a sneeze that triggers an avalanche of long-existing 
structural problems—most centrally our rampant economic inequality. We must 
take this crisis as a wake-up call to finally take structural action to end our 
long-time crisis of inequality.”



COVID-19 and the Next Evolution of Economics - Evonomics
https://evonomics.com/covid-19-and-the-next-evolution-of-economics/
(via Instapaper)

31 March 2020

We’ve never needed new economic thinking like we do right now. The economic 
effects of the COVID crisis are again laying bare the failings of traditional 
economic thinking. But it is also forcing our institutions toward beneficial 
policies that would usually be anathema to orthodox understandings.

Evonomics haspublished hundreds of articles over the last four years that 
rationalize and explain what we need to do today, and why. Here’s a guide to 
those articles. We hope you, our readers, will find them as fascinating and 
useful as we do.

New economic thinking can change the world, for the better. Please join us in 
sharing these ideas, and turning them into actions.

Robert Kadar, Editor
Steve Roth, Publisher

Covid-19 Is a Tragedy of the Commons—but We Can Collectively Mitigate the 
Tragedy

Coronavirus is a classic Tragedy of the Commons problem: everyone acting in 
their own self-interest leads to worse outcomes for the collective. But Nobel 
Laureate Elinor Ostrom has a solution to that tragedy: design principles for 
the commons. “Social Distancing” and “flattening the curve” are examples of 
community design principles for managing our common health and healthcare 
resources.

It’s Time to Replace the Economics of “Me” with the Economics of “We” by 
Jonathan Rowe and David Bollier

Optimizing for Human Well-Being by Douglas Rushkoff

The Tragedy of the Commons: How Elinor Ostrom Solved One of Life’s Greatest 
Dilemmas by David Sloan Wilson

Why Common Ownership Is a Route to Social Transformation by George Monbiot

The Woman Who Saved Economics from Disaster by David Sloan Wilson

Cooperation Beats Competition; Pro-Sociality Beats Self-Interest

Neoclassical economics claims that “greed is good”—by following one’s own 
self-interest, “all boats rise.” Unfortunately, we have evidence—from biology 
to anthropology to sociology to economics—that it simply isn’t true. Only 
through pro-social, cooperative behavior can we all thrive. It’s time to put 
these principles into practice as we collectively tackle Coronavirus.

Where Do Pro-Social Institutions Come From? By Pseudoerasmus

How Norway Proves Laissez-faire Economics Is Not Just Wrong, It’s Toxic. By 
David S. Wilson and Dag O. Hessen

Are We Cooperative or Competitive? Our View Shapes the Economy by Sandra Aamodt

Economics Doesn’t Have to Be Immoral

Neoclassical economics distorts Darwin’s theory of evolution to argue that 
making more money must be morally good because the “invisible hand” rewards 
“fitness.” But if we consult the research—from biology to anthropology—this 
“just so story” doesn’t begin to represent the complexity of human evolution. 
We evolved economic morality. It’s time to put it into practice.

Paleo-Economics Shaped Us Morally by Jag Bhalla

Inequality Made Our Economy Fragile. Coronavirus Could Break the Camel’s Back.

The Coronavirus is a sneeze that triggers an avalanche of long-existing 
structural problems—most centrally our rampant economic inequality. We must 
take this crisis as a wake-up call to finally take structural action to end our 
long-time crisis of inequality.

The Social Safety Net Won’t Catch Us Unless Will Rebuild It

“Trickle-down” economics, austerity, and the evisceration of the social safety 
net make us—both collectively and individually—much more vulnerable to 
emergencies. This is especially true for members of the working and service 
class who are disproportionately either out of work or on the front lines as 
healthcare workers, grocery store workers, etc. Without robust investment in 
the social safety net, this crisis will get worse, and we will repeat it again 
in the future.

The American Healthcare System Shows Why We Can’t Trust Free Market Ideologues 
by Jag Bhalla interview with Economist Robert H. Frank

Why Income Inequality Increases Maternal Infanticide by Eric Michael Johnson

America is Regressing into a Developing Nation for Most People by Lynn Parramore

Now Is the Time for Universal Income

Economists and thinkers have been discussing Universal Income (sometimes called 
Universal Basic income or UBI) for decades. It could prove a solution to 
outsourcing, automation, and the resulting lack of jobs. But it’s even more 
essential now with 3.3 million Americans applying for unemployment in a single 
week. Universal Income’s time came long ago; now we increasingly have no choice.

How Basic Income Solves Capitalism’s Fundamental Problem by Tom Streithorst

How to Pay for Universal Basic Income by James K. Boyce and Peter Barnes

Donating = Changing Economics. And Changing the World.

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