José Ossandón writes, in response to my earlier post about social studies of markets:
" I was very glad to find the post in your blog that mentions an special issue we edited in the journal Economy & Society (January 6th http://marketdesigner.blogspot.com/2020/01/social-studies-of-markets-marketplaces.html ). I was less happy though when I read that you found the whole thing too abstract and hard to follow.
" I was very glad to find the post in your blog that mentions an special issue we edited in the journal Economy & Society (January 6th http://marketdesigner.blogspot.com/2020/01/social-studies-of-markets-marketplaces.html ). I was less happy though when I read that you found the whole thing too abstract and hard to follow.
Of course, the type of research-problem that motivate us are
very different. While your object is the design of markets, we are trying to
find out how to study market designers. But, I would hope you and your
colleagues can also understand what we do. With this in mind, I wrote a
summary, that ended in the five points below, trying to be as clear as
possible. Hope these – certainly very sketchy - notes will make what concern us
more understandable.
- Policy makers
around the world increasingly rely on markets as solutions for the most
various collective issues. We denominate markets that are also policy
instruments ‘markets for collective concerns’. The increasing reliance on
markets for collective concerns opens relevant questions for researchers
in different social scientific disciplines.
- Historians of economic
ideas, for instance, have pointed out that there has been a crucial
transformation in the concept of market in economics. Few decades ago, markets
were understood in opposition to organization and design. There was, on
the one hand, the market as a form of spontaneous coordination, and, on
the other, planned designed formal organization. Today, instead, markets
are seen as object of design. This is not only a conceptual change. To use
Ian Hacking’s categories, there has been a transition from description
to intervention. Today, economists see the market as an object of
engineering.
- To sociologists of work, it
could be argued that what we see is the consolidation of a new profession.
The historical intersection that generated the niche for the market
designer is, perhaps paradoxically, not the success but the failure of
markets. When markets originally created as policy instruments did not
work as well as those who developed them expected to work (for example,
school choice and competition didn’t simply increase quality of learning),
decision makers didn’t go back to non-market instruments. Instead, they
turned to experts in market repair. Market designers’ claim of
professional jurisdiction, to use Andrew Abbott’s term, is that, to work
properly markets require them.
- For economic sociologists,
these developments trigger new problems. Traditionally, economic
sociologists assume that one of their roles is to produce sociological
definitions of the concept of market (i.e. if markets are a type of social
formation: what are the basic elements that delimit markets as a
particular social form?). Studying the market of market designers,
however, requires a different stance. When studying market designers, the
concept of markets is not something sociologists can define in advance, it
becomes an empirical variable. Market designers are practitioners that
mobilize different and varying conception of markets, and those who study
them have to follow these modifications case to case.
- Finally, for scholars in
science and technology studies, it becomes relevant to know more about the
practice of market designers. Today, crucial matters of collective concern
(for instance, a fairer and better school system, a solution for
electronic waste, or how to build a more sustainable energy grid),
depends, at least partially, on the work of experts on market design. As
market designers are tasked with crucial collective responsibilities, it
becomes very important to understand better issues like how these
technical scientists conceive their vocation, the type of ethic of their
work, and how they understand responsibility and collaboration.
Hope this helps and thanks a lot for keeping an interest in
our work,
Best regards
José"
He also pointed me towards his paper
Ossandón, José (2019) : Notes on market design and economic sociology,economic sociology_the european electronic newsletter, ISSN 1871-3351, Max Planck Institutefor the Study of Societies (MPIfG), Cologne, Vol. 20, Iss. 2, pp. 31-39,
which considers parallels between the social studies of markets and the growth of market design in economics.
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