

German contemporary analyses of economic order
standard ordnungstheorie, ordoliberalism and ordnungsökonomik in perspective
pp. 93-128
in: Agnes Labrousse, Jean-Daniel Weisz (eds), Institutional economics in France and Germany, Berlin, Springer, 2001Abstract
Characterizing the processual orderliness of economic structures is a strong tradition of German economic discourse (Tribe 1995 pp. 1–8). The oldest contributions came from the cameralist sciences which, by defining the role of the state established a link between welfare objectives, the social as well as the legal order, and consensus. Friedrich List, for his part, defines a national and historical system of the economy that is opposed to the "cosmopolitan" view of British paleo-liberalism. For List, the structure of an economy can only be understood with reference to the political interests of nations which themselves depend on the stage of economic development reached. Subsequently, the German Historical schools developed appropriate tools for analysing economic structures and evolution. By introducing a revised method of analysis that leads to the definition of the concept of economic order, the Freiburg school finally emerged as the contemporary synthesis of the ideas relating to this issue.