Tag: EconomicTheory

Capitalism: A Very Brief Introduction

Capitalism is defined by the Cambridge dictionary as, ‘An economic and political system in which property, business, and industry are controlled by private owners rather than by the state, with the purpose of making a profit.’ Following this definition, not every country can be considered ‘capitalist’.

Rate this:

The Financial Crisis and the Systemic Failure of Academic Economics. Lessons from the Financial Crisis: Causes, Consequences, and Our Economic Future

The authors note that the instability leading to crisis is assumed away by the models which assume inherent stability. Economists are confined to models of stable states that are perturbed by limited external shocks. Economists failed to incorporate the intrinsic recurrent boom-and-bust dynamics characteristic of a complex economic system. Consequently, ‘systemic crisis’ is treated as an ‘otherworldly event’ absent from theoretical frameworks.

Rate this:

Comprehending Human Economic Behavior Through a Multicultural Lens: Examining the Concepts of Homo Economicus and Islamicus

Author states that the validity of the homo economicus model has been challenged by substantial empirical evidence showing that human beings are not entirely rational in their economic decision making, and are prone to cognitive biases and sociological factors. Herbert Simon proposed the concept of “bounded rationality” to describe the limitations of human rationality. The behavioural economics movement also sought to incorporate psychological insights into economic analysis, to construct more realistic models of human behaviour. The validity of the homo islamicus model has also been questioned for being overly idealistic and not necessarily reflecting the actual behaviour of Muslim economic agents, who are profoundly shaped by the modern social context.

Rate this:

Beyond Integrative Approaches: Methodological Tensions in Islamic Economics

Islamic Economics stands at a crossroads. To analyse what is, it must pragmatically adapt mainstream tools—provided they are stripped of reductionist assumptions. To articulate what ought to be, however, it must dare to innovate: developing tawhid-centric models that reflect humanity’s role as Allah’s stewards (khalifah). This dual approach rejects both uncritical integration and isolationist purism. As Dr. Shaikh advocates, pluralistic methodology allows IE to engage the mainstream while retaining its soul. The goal is not to mimic physics-envying economics, but to redefine economics itself—as a science of human flourishing, anchored in divine guidance. In the words of the Quran, “Do they not contemplate the Kingdom of the heavens and the earth?” (7:185). Islamic Economics, at its best, is this contemplation enacted—a discipline where tools serve truth, not the other way around.

Rate this: