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JULY 19, 2021
Dialogues économiques is taking its summer break and looks forward to seeing you on September 1st !
To keep you waiting until then, the online magazine offers you a selection of articles to (re)read...

This week, two Dialogues économiques articles to discuss the topic of regulation

Can the market be ethical?

Combining markets and ethics isn’t easy, and the numerous frauds and scams that intervene at regular intervals don’t help. Should we be looking for more competition to reach efficiency or, on the contrary, seeking market regulation? To respond to this dilemma, economist Marie Claire Villeval uses experimental tools....Read the article

Once upon a time in the Wild West : The Good, the Bad and the State

Talking about the Gold Rush and the Wild West immediately conjures up fortune seekers and anarchy, but certainly not economic analysis. Yet economists, among them Marc Sangnier, have demonstrated how the presence of state institutions significantly reduced criminality in these areas, both back then and ever since, using data on mining in the Great American West. But what about the violence prevalent in states (or regions) before state institutions were established to ensure some form of property rights regulation?...Read the article

 

 

Latest publications

When France’s Légion d’honneur awards move stock prices: A market signal of political access
Two articles by Stéphane Benveniste (University of Paris 1, CES, AMSE) and Marc Sangnier (Aix-Marseille University, AMSE) published in VoxEU (CEPR) and The Conversation.
The 'Dialogues économiques' magazine No. 6 is online
This issue compiles the 'Dialogues économiques' articles published in 2025.
"Us" Against "Them": Ethnicity in Conflict
Whilst war fractures societies, it can bring about reinforced bonds within the communities it targets. By analysing ethnic conflicts across 36 African countries between 2002 and 2015, economist Matteo Sestito offers an original perspective on the mechanisms that forge identities and strengthen cohesion within the communities it strikes.