Is Econ 101 Killing America?
Robert Atkinson and Michael Lind post a lively critique of Econ 101 as
taught across the neoclassical world with a theme of “10 Myths” in “Salon”
Forget the dumbed-down
garbage most economists spew. Their myths are causing tragic results for
everyday Americans. …
… Myth 5: All profitable activities are good for the economy.
Another axiom of
Econ 101 is the assumption that all profitable activities are good for the
economy: After all, Adam Smith “proved” that pursuit of self-interest maximizes
economic welfare. To be sure, even Econ 101 would recognize that societies use
legal penalties to discourage economic transactions like prostitution and drug
use that are considered immoral, to say nothing of Mafia contract killing.
But
the version of Econ 101 familiar to most politicians and pundits ignores the distinction
between productive activities (e.g., making useful appliances or lifesaving
vaccines) and pure rents (profiting from real estate appreciation, stock
manipulation or the accident of owning mineral deposits that become more
valuable). If the greatest fortunes are to be made in financial arbitrage,
gambling in real estate or exploiting crony-capitalist political connections,
the argument that private profit-seeking maximizes economic welfare and the
public good is undermined. …
…
When the U.S. economy faced little competition and was largely based on
industrial mass production industries, it was perhaps not so bad that
policymakers relied on Econ 101 as their guide to economic policy. But in a
complex, global, technologically driven economy in which nation-states compete
to capture markets and key links in global supply chains, relying on Econ 101
is like a physicist today relying on Newton. It’s time for economists to fess
up and admit that theirs is not a science and that what passes for Econ 101 is
largely misleading. But the public, the media and politicians shouldn’t wait,
for it may be a long, long time coming. Rather, they need to understand that a
dumbed-down Econ 101 version of neoclassical economics no longer should serve
as a road map for economic policy.”
Comment
I
agree with much of Robert Atkinson and Michael Lind’s approach in their article (follow the
link for the other “9 errors”.
They seem to think that higher econ classes and post-graduate work fills
in some of the inadequacies of Econ 101, whereas I consider they only entrench
the initial errors with a more and more complex an unrelated to the real world neoclassical
theory.
However, the longest journey starts with the initial
steps and I am pleased to see the initial groundwork undertaken with the “10
errors”.
Economies are complex and relationships between
markets (of all kinds) and governments (of all kinds) – and institutions of all
kinds (and while we are at it, customs and practices of all kinds) cannot be
captured in a pure neoclassical model or set of equations.
This is where the academy of economists splits off and
stops listening (and looking).
Adam Smith’s lifetime’s work, well short of it represented in his
surviving works (published by Oxford University Press), remains in a half
finished state. Even what has
survived is mostly left unread, which leaves Smith’s project incomplete and
vulnerable to easy dismissal by those imbued with over confidence in what they
believe is economic science – even glued to the unfaltering certainties that
their incomplete so-called “models” which they learned (and in some cases
brilliantly invented themselves) in postgraduate works.
Fortunately, beside Smith’s early efforts, many
individual scholars have made efforts to bring economics into more scientific
approaches that encompass the utter complexities of the real world and the way
the multitudes of participants in their societies go about the “ordinary
business of social life.
In this sense, I would advise making an effort to read
Hayek and to take a look at Schumpeter, some of Kirzner’s writings on
entrepreneurship, Daniel Klein likewise, and get a feel for what makes real
markets operate.
Of course, read Adam Smith beyond Wealth Of Nations
(read WN if you haven’t done so yet!) and think about describing how we got to
where we are (Deirdre McCloskey is an excellent place to start with her
‘Bourgeois Dignity”!).
Read a few of these books, even casually, to get an
idea of the alternative to the neoclassical imaginary world,. Read about the evolutionary history of
the real world, the one we live in.
If we understand how we got here it might help us to better understand more about
the prospects for changing those things that might be changed, though we must
accept that despite any feelings we may have of the many things that we may
wish to change, the agenda for practical changes is tiny in comparison,
inckuding over even a longish period.
In the short period the practical change agenda
approaches epsilon. Robert Atkinson and Michael Lind’s article is as good a
place as any to start.
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