Understand how complex systems coordinate big goals from the top down.
This book presents a General Systems Theory approach to coordinating many decision units in a hierarchy, with practical insight into economic problems and policy design.
In clear terms, it explains what active coordination means, how a coordinating agency can influence outcomes, and what makes coordination possible or impossible in real-world economies. You’ll see models, definitions, and examples that connect abstract theory to concrete questions about price setting, constraints, and overall welfare.
- How coordination differs from passive, self-organizing systems
- Conditions under which a price vector can align individual incentives with the whole system
- The role of information, power, and constraints in centralized coordination
- Connections between general systems theory and economic problem solving
Ideal for readers of economic theory and systems thinking who want a structured, accessible framework for coordinating multiple agents toward a common objective.