Another Poor Darwinian Application
Dominic D. P.
Johnson, University of Oxford,
Michael E. Price, Brunel University, Mark Van Vugt
University of Amsterdam have written a paper: “Darwin’s Invisible Hand: Market Competition,
Evolution and the Firm.”
Abstract
Competition
among firms has been suggested to reflect the ruthless logic of Darwinian selection: a
free market is a struggle for survival, in which successful firms survive and unsuccessful
ones die. This view appears to bolster three pillars of neoclassical economics:
(1) that economic actors are self-interested; (2) that self-interest leads to public goods
(Adam Smith’s “invisible hand”); and (3) that together these lead to market optimisation.
However, this chain of reasoning leads to a paradox. We show that the application
of Darwinian selection to competition among firms (as opposed to among individuals)
invokes group selection, which leads to exactly the opposite
predictions: notably
altruism and the suppression of individual self-interest. We apply an
alternative evolutionary
model of economic competition, Multi-Level Selection (MLS) theory, which
integrates the effects of selection at both individual and group levels.
This approach
reveals that, while individuals may generally pursue their own self-interest
(as in the standard
evolutionary account), humans also have evolved traits that—as if led by an invisible
hand—steer our self-interest to align with the good of the firm or wider society as
well. But it is the hand of Darwin, not Smith.
“Firms
compete. Good ones survive and bad ones die. This looks like the logic of Darwinian
selection, as has been periodically suggested over the last century by prominent
economists including Joseph Schumpeter (1961, 2008[1942]), Milton Friedman
(1954, 1970), and Niall Ferguson (2007,
2008). If true, it would be important because it offers independent support for
three pillars of dominant economic wisdom: (1) that
actors are self-interested; (2) that this self-interest leads to public goods
(Smith’s invisible hand); and (3) that together these lead to market
optimization. However, we have shown that, ironically, applying Darwinian logic
to competition among firms invokes group
selection. If firms compete with each other and experience Darwinian selection
at this level, then the firms that are most likely to survive (all else equal)
are those with altruistic individuals who accept fewer resources to work
harder. So either the theory or the predictions are wrong. A Darwinian view of
economic markets may accurately reflect competition among firms, but undermines
the individual self-interest assumptions of neoclassical economics. (P 35)” …
“Modern
economics, [Gowdy, J.M., Dollimore, D., Witt, U., Wilson, D.S., Forthcoming in
Economic Cosmology and the Evolutionary Challenge. Journal of Economic Behaviour
and Organization] put it, “focuses selectively on [Adam] Smith’s plea for
unfettered markets as a source of wealth and welfare.” We concur with their
view that an evolutionary understanding of human behavior is vital if we are to
ensure positive outcomes in economics and public policy. People cooperate with
each other and create public goods, but only in the “right” circumstances. A
popular reason that they do so is buried in human nature assumptions of
economics that everyone knows are wrong. Evolution led to Homo sapiens, not Homo economicus. The real reason
people cooperate the way they do is buried in evolutionary time, but has
resulted in evolved cognitive mechanisms that serve individual and sometimes
also group interests, often at a subconscious level—as if led by an invisible
hand. But it is the hand of Darwin, not Smith.”
Comment
This is an interesting paper, following recent papers and
books on the Darwinian alternative to Smith. I find them unconvincing. They start from complete misrepresentation of Adam Smith’s
works, largely because they start from the mainstream mistaken view of Adam
Smith on the IH, even though the error is easily corrected by direct reference
to Adam Smith and from the elementary and obvious error in ascribing to Smith a
wholly contradictory view of the alleged “three pillars
of dominant economic wisdom: (1) that
actors are self-interested; (2) that this self-interest leads to public goods
(Smith’s invisible hand); and (3) that together these lead to market optimization.” People's self interests can conflict with the self-interests of others. An elementary flaw in the "dominant wisdom" (sic).
Smith’s view of self-interested is
wildly at variance with the neoclassical summary of its alleged “three
pillars”.
“Actors are self-interested” truncates
Smith’s more complex moral philosophy.
Humans are social animals not like natures’ animals with individual
egos. Humans are dependent on the
cooperation of others in the species.
This is a distinguishing characteristic of humans, outlined in Book I of
Wealth Of Nations (read the first 2 chapters if you are unfamiliar with them).
Because we are inter-dependent on the
co-operative assistance of others for our daily sustenance over our lifetimes,
outsight selfish egoism is not a winning strategy. Each self-interested ego must learn (and does) to mediate
with other self-interested egos.
No man is an island in a sea of indifference to others. Ayn Rand romanticised the virtues of
selfishness. So did Bernard
Mandeville (1724). Smith described
such views as licentious.
Smith did not say that “self-interest
leads to public goods”. Read through Books I to III (and most of Book IV) and
note how many times the mentions self-interested behaviours leading to harmful
consequences for others, which by definition did not add to human welfare. I give you over 70 examples:
Wealth Of Nations: Book 1: 40, 43, 52, 71, 77, 78 (2), 79, 80, 83, 84,
91, 100, 106, 112, 115, 135, 136, 139, 140 (2), 141, 142, 143, 144 (2), 145 (3), 146
(3), 151 (3), 152, 153, 154, 157 (2), 158, 160, 171, 174, 267; Book 2: 285, 294, 301(2), 302,
303, 308, 310, 311,312, 315, 316, 326, 339, 342, 346, 349, 357, 362; Book 3: 378 (2), 380,
382 (2), 384, 385, 386, 387, 390, 393 (3), 397, 398, 402,
406, 415, 418, 419, 422, 427.
In short, it is a travesty of Adam
Smith’s singular use of the IH metaphor in WN to generalize it into a
‘law-like’ principle of an IH. The
blame for that nonsense started with Paul Samuelson in 1948 and continued with
modern economists working their imaginations without checking what Adam Smith
was saying. As for Homo economicus, such an idea is absurd when applied to
Smith.
Seeking analogies in Darwinian
selection is fashionable, but often misses the point. Firms can have short lives (exemplified in the old saying:
“clogs to clogs in three generations”).
Long before the first firm, humans experienced multiple generations of
hunting bands, tribes, nations, and empires. Their detritus is scattered wherever humans settled. Was this typical of Darwinian
selection too? It took c.6 million
years to speciate from the common ancestor through to Homo sapiens, and
c.200,000 years to arrive where we are today.
This ‘survival of the fittest’ notion
should be put in context. Firms
come and go for all kinds of reasons (‘three generations’ says folk lore). Some go on for a couple of hundred
years. Living things can go on for billions of years. Natural selection works throughout these long time
periods. Species can separate
(that’s why we are here) and continue alongside each other, others die out,
even without competing, and some out-compete in limited space. Innovation removes firms from old
technologies either directly or indirectly. Within the lifetimes of individuals these changes may have
no effect upon them.
I short, I am not convinced by
biological analogies, though I am convinced by Darwinian science. When people who are convinced by
biological analogies demonstrate that they understand Adam Smith’s moral
philosophy and his use of the IH metaphor, I shall take more note of them. Should I referee a paper like that of Dominic D. P. Johnson, Michael E. Price, and Mark
Van Vugt I would suggest, respectively, that they read Adam Smith first and then re-submit.
PS. Somebody send a comment which I passed for publication but it appears to have disappeared! It was about the gap between Darwin's thinking and Social Darwinism. Please re-send!
PS. Somebody send a comment which I passed for publication but it appears to have disappeared! It was about the gap between Darwin's thinking and Social Darwinism. Please re-send!
3 Comments:
They're certainly using the the term economists loosely...Niall Ferguson?
I enjoyed your comments on this one. While the analogy is tempting to make, overextending Smith's ideas and trying to force fit connections with Darwin isn't worthy of peer-reviewed journal.
I would also suggest that the authors consider the modern anthropoligical theory that altruism is, in many cases, a delayed form of reciprocity. Could these individuals working harder for fewer resources not be expecting delayed rewards? Are they perhaps the one's paying their dues in order to one day have a more cushiony lot?
Thanks for sharing! Really enjoy the blog.
They should also read Charles Darwin. He did not write, so far as I know, books on morality. But From Darwin to socialdarwinism is about as far from the truth as Adam Smith and the invisible hand.
Joseph
Good comment, with which I tend to agree (see today's post).
If they are correcting Adam Smith's ideas I expect them to know them thoroughly. Clearly they don't and hence I distrust their understanding of Darwin's "Natural Selection".
Gavin
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