Does General Equilibrium Theory Make Economics a Hard Science or a Fantasy?
Lars P. Sylls Blog carried a post on
“Why general equilibrium economics is a dead end” by Franklin M. Fisher
(21 July, 2012) HERE
“Almost a century and a half after Léon
Walras founded general equilibrium theory, economists still have not been
able to show that markets lead economies to equilibria.
We do know that – under very
restrictive assumptions – equilibria do exist, are unique and are
Pareto-efficient.
But after reading Franklin M. Fisher‘s masterly article The stability of general equilibrium
– what do we know and why is it important? one has to ask
oneself – what good does that do?
As long as we cannot show, except under
exceedingly special assumptions, that there are convincing reasons to
suppose there are forces which lead economies to equilibria - the value of
general equilibrium theory is nil. As long as we can not really
demonstrate that there are forces operating – under reasonable, relevant and at
least mildly realistic conditions – at moving markets to equilibria, there can
not really be any sustainable reason for anyone to pay any interest or
attention to this theory.
A stability that can only be proved by
assuming “Santa Claus” conditions is of no avail. Most people do not believe in
Santa Claus anymore. And for good reasons. Santa Claus is for kids, and general
equilibrium economists ought to grow up, leaving their Santa Claus economics in
the dustbin of history.
Continuing to
model a world full of agents behaving as economists – “often wrong, but never
uncertain” – and still not being able to show that the system under reasonable
assumptions converges to equilibrium (or simply assume"
Comment
I am inclined to agree with the above
comment/review by Lars Sylls, from his Blog and with the reported skepticism of
Franklin M. Fisher
about the value of theories of general equilibrium as taught in neoclassical
economics departments. The relatively simple maths (to physics majors) of
economics allegedly ‘prove’ to social science majors at least that economics is
a hard science and worthy of the admiration of real scientists. It certainly can be hard for less
numerate students but whether it is a real science is another matter. There are
reports of physicists smiling indulgently at such claims by some economists.
Mathematically minded economists, in my
experience seldom indulge their fellow economists who prefer to study the real
world rather than the imaginary world of general equilibrium. Adam Smith, no mean mathematician
himself – it was his favourite subject at Glasgow University and afterwards –
studiously avoided applying his mathematical skills to his treatment of
political economy. Hence he did not make presumptions about aspects of general equilibrium
applying to his approach to Wealth Of Nations.
Franklin M. Fisher appears to agree
coming at general equilibrium from another angle – it is disconnectedfrom the real
economy. Lars P. Sylls also seems to be skeptical of its value too. So do I.
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