Understanding the Culture of Markets: A Reflection

Originally published in The Review of Austrian Economics

This essay examines Virgil Storr’s Understanding the Culture of Markets particularly the relationship between cultures and constitutions and the particulars of the ideal-typical ‘spirit’ of capitalism.

This essay examines Virgil Storr’s Understanding the Culture of Markets particularly the relationship between cultures and constitutions and the particulars of the ideal-typical ‘spirit’ of capitalism. Culture cannot be viewed as a constitution, I argue, because of fundamental differences between the two types of guidance to conduct, both for the actors within them and the researchers studying them. I also consider possibly conflicting interpretations of the idea of the animating spirit(s) of a market in the context of Storr’s example of the economic culture of the Bahamas.

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