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Economic Imperialism
Here's
what
Edward Lazear, presently the Chairman of the Council of Economic
Advisers, has to say about economics. It was originally one unbroken
paragraph; I have separated the main points, which give a pretty
good summary of one form of economic orthodoxy.
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Economics is not only a science, it
is a genuine science.
Like the physical sciences, economics
uses a methodology that produces refutable implications
and tests these implications using solid statistical
techniques. In particular, economics stresses three
factors that distinguish it from other social sciences.
Economists use the construct of
rational individuals who engage in maximizing behavior.
Economic models adhere strictly to
the importance of equilibrium as part of any theory.
Finally, a focus on efficiency leads
economists to ask questions that other social science
ignore.
These ingredients have allowed
economics to invade intellectual territory that
previously was deemed to be outside the discipline's
realm. |
Based
on my reading, at least five of the six points are highly
questionable. The whole issue of "What is really a science?" is
terribly confused by now, and strong claims like Lazear's can only
be thought of as ideological. The empiricism and testability of much
of neoclassical marginalism is very doubtful. The hypothesis of
"rational individuals" never was at all well-grounded, and it's now
under heavy attack.
Equilibrium has turned out to be a false, conservative standard (in
the physicist's sense of "conservative) which causes economists to
ignore and misunderstand historicity (see Mirowski, 1989, and
Mirowski, 2004, pp. 229-271). Finally, economics' incursions into
new territory have often been
ridiculous and
disastrous.
It
doesn't make any difference, though, because Lazear is the Chairman
of the Council of Economic Advisers. People in positions like his
are the ones who decide what the default position, and they don't
have to listen to anyone. Here's a review of Mirowski:
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The heterodox ideas found here and
elsewhere have had no impact on economics as a whole,
just as the body of science studies research has had no
effect on the natural sciences. Mirowski would attribute
this to the "vested interest" of neoclassical economics.
An alternative explanation is that research programs
such as those found here—which fail to provide either
new empirical insights or criticisms of existing
practice that are intellectually compelling, let alone
constructive ways to proceed—do not have enough
substance to warrant a claim on intellectual resources.
In my judgment, in this instance the marketplace of
ideas is working efficiently.
Steven N. Durlauf, Economics, University of
Wisconsin–Madison |
If, of
course, Lazear and Durlauf are right, then they're right. If they're
wrong, though, we can conclude that their arrogance comes from their
entrenched institutional position. To me they, like many academics
today, are like the Sorbonne scholastics so hated by the humanists
and philosophes: brilliant at what they did, institutionally
impregnable, and out of touch with the real world.
Addendum:
Tyler
Cowen, well-respected and not-too-crazy economist, on Lazear:
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Lazear is a superb economist. I
do not know him, but I often hear him spoken of with a
more general respect, and not just for his intellect.
More |
Bibliography
Colander, David, Holt, Richard, and Barkley Rosser eds., The
Changing Face of Economics, Michigan 2004.
Fullbrook, Edward, What's Wrong With Economics, Anthem, 2004.
Keen,
Steve, Debunking Economics, Zed Books, 2004.
McCumber,
John, Time in the Ditch,
Northwestern, 2001.
Mirowski, Philip,
Machine Dreams, Cambridge, 2002.
Mirowski, Philip, The Effortless Economy of Science, Duke,
2004.
Mirowski,
Philip, More Heat than Light ,Cambridge, 1989.
Redman,
Deborah, Economics and the Philosophy of Science, Oxford,
1993.
Reisch, George, How
the Cold War Transformed Philosophy of Science, Cambridge, 2005.
http://www.idiocentrism.com/becker.htm
http://www.idiocentrism.com/whyecon.htm
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I am emersonj at gmail dot com.
Original materials copyright John J
Emerson
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