Three Cheers for Students Who Challenge the Neo-Classical Monopoly in Teaching Economics
On visits to "Smith's Deli", my
local coffee shop that I pass occasionally on one of my daily walking routes in south Edinburgh, Scotland, the only newspaper available to read is "The Guardian". Now, I should make clear that I am not a typical “Guardian”
reader, in fact I am usually, though not always, towards the side of those its editorial policy
considers beyond the pale on many political controversies. However,
Zach
Ward-Perkins and Joe Earle
write in The Guardian, 28 October HERE
NOTE: Zach Ward-Perkins is a founder
member of the Post-Crash Economics Society at the University of Manchester (England).
“Economics
students need to be taught more than neoclassical theory”
“University
syllabuses for economics are stuck on an outdated model. There are other
schools of thought worth learning about
'Neoclassical
economics is the mainstream and it is vital for economics students to
understand it … However, it does not comprise the whole of economics and nor
should it.'
Would the ordinary
person regard how economics
students are educated as a significant political issue? Probably
not, but the way economics students are educated has much wider implications
for society than is commonly imagined. …
Economics is highly
technical and often mathematical, and this elevates economists to a position of
expertise from which they mediate economic analysis to the British public. They
are the guardians of our economy, charged with its upkeep, and they play an
important role in shaping political narratives around economics. Yet British
universities are producing economics graduates who are not fit for this
purpose. …
The financial crisis
represents the ultimate failure of this education system and of the academic
discipline as a whole. Economics education is dominated by
neoclassical economics, which tries to understand the economy
through modelling individual agents. Firms, consumers and politicians face
clear choices under conditions of scarcity, and must allocate their resources
in order to satisfy their preferences. Different agents meet through a market,
where the mathematical formulae that characterise their behaviour interact to
produce an "equilibrium". The theory emphasises the need for
micro-foundations, which is a technical term for basing your model of the whole
economy on extrapolating from individual behaviour. …
The Post-Crash Economics Society
is a group of economics students at the University of Manchester who believe
that neoclassical economic theory should no longer have a monopoly within our
economics courses. Societies at Cambridge,
UCL and LSE have been founded to highlight similar issues and we hope this will
spread to other universities too. At the moment an undergraduate, graduate or
even a professional economist could easily go through their career without
knowing anything substantive about other schools of thought, such as
post-Keynesian, Austrian, institutional, Marxist, evolutionary, ecological or
feminist economics. Such schools of thought are simply considered inferior or
irrelevant for economic "science". …
We propose that
neoclassical theory be taught alongside and in conjunction with a broad variety
of other schools of thought consistently throughout the undergraduate degree.
In this way the discipline is opened up to critical discussion and evaluation.
How well do different schools explain economic phenomena? Which assumptions
should we build our models upon? Should we believe that markets are inherently
self-stabilising or does another school of thought explain reality better? When
economists are taught to think like this, all of society will benefit and more
economists will see the next crisis coming. Critical pluralism opens up
possibilities and the imagination.
Comment
Well-done, Zach
Ward-Perkins and Joe Earle,
and the “Post-Crash Economics Society” at Manchester University (England). I hope the sentiments they express
spread across the discipline.
The first signs I noticed were the relentless
march of the neo-classical economists across the Academy in the 1960s.
First, they rooted out those interested
in the history of economic thought in most economic departments, then they
drove out all those resisting in all aspects of economics into Heteredoxy enabling them by
judicious recruitment of their replacements on their retirement, or from their moving
elsewhere or simply from ill-health, though promotions were not always open to them in many places where a
neoclassical elite had taken charge.
Secondly, they encouraged, later making it
mandatory, new students to be pre-qualified in mathematics that became
increasingly sophisticated. I noticed that Greg Mankew advises his potential students before arriving for his first-year classes to undertake as much Maths as they can - they have been warned. (In the spirit of helping economics students who were not well versed in maths, I wrote a short book, alas no longer in print, "Mathematics for Innumerate Economists" (Duckworth, London). Inevitably, promotion, which had always been dependent on the number of
papers published in the top journals, in due course required creative
applications of maths to economic policies (with statistics/econometrics acting
in a secondary sweeping-up role), squeezing out what was regarded as not "proper" economics. Considering the "fine mess" the neo-classical triumph produced from 2009 and neglect by scholars of the wider shores of economic theory and history, the neo-classical economists, Noble Prizes not with standing, turned into a brittle triumph indeed.
I recommend readers, no matter what their initial skepticism, to follow the above link and pass it around.
1 Comments:
"First, they rooted out those interested in the history of economic thought in most economic departments"
Indeed. And there's virtually no coverage of the history of economic thought in most economics curricula. Even Heilbronner's The Worldly Philosophers is paraphrase of the early economists, with virtually no significant citations from original works.
My own reexamination started with returning to historical foundations (of which much present scholarship is very poor).
I'm also convinced that much of the mathematics used in economics serves more to obscure than to illuminate.
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