Economics is one of the most important academic
disciplines. It produces knowledge about one of the fundamental components of a
civilized society:
1. the satisfaction of human needs,
2. by means of production and distribution of
scarce resources,
3. subject to fundamental uncertainty.
Economists hold in their hands - whether they like
it or not - the key to prosperity for all mankind. It is their (our) moral duty
to explain to our policy makers, and to the general public, the difference
between policies that elevate a society out of misery, and policies that hurl
it back down again.
It would be wrong to say that economists have ever
excelled at what their profession has set out to do. However, there have been
times throughout our history when economists have actually been relevant and
changed the course of history. Giants of our discipline such as John Maynard
Keynes and Milton Friedman have had influence at the systemic level, changing
the very design of fiscal and monetary policy, as well as government
institutions.
Robert Mundell's work was very influential in
building the European Union and its central bank. Gunnar Myrdal and John
Kenneth Galbraith strongly influenced the design of the modern welfare
state.
There are many other, men and women whose
contributions deserve respect, regardless of whether we think the outcome was
good or not. What matters is that economists use their discipline to change
society for the better, as they understand "better".
Unfortunately, in the past half century, or even
less than that, the very nature of economics has changed. The discipline - if I
may speak of it as a collective of practitioners - is no longer trying to grasp
the fundamental, systemic problems of our time. The modern economist is
fragmented, narrowly focused and in many instances systemically
illiterate.
I cannot blame individual economists for this. The
problem lies in how economists are trained, what goes into a graduate program -
and what is expected to come out of it. There are exceptions, no doubt, but the
overwhelming trend since at least the late 1980s has been to concentrate
graduate programs on mathematics and econometrics. The kind of old-style theory
training, along with thorough methodological studies, that went into the work of
early-20th century economics education, is gone.
What ability does a student have to answer
questions about the slowdown of growth across the Western world, when he can go
through undergraduate and graduate training without ever putting the IS-LM model
to work? How does a newly trained economist explain the reasons why the
Quantitative Easing-style monetary stimulus is entirely ineffective against the
slow-to-no growth rates in Europe? Can any practitioner of the dismal science
clarify why fiscal austerity has not elevated Greece out of its long, agonizing
depression?
To be fair, many economists have addressed these
problems. It is not for lack of interest in these issues that economists fail
to contribute to a better world. The problem lies with how economists are
trained and what is considered "appropriate" methodology in the
profession in general. The three pillars of mainstream economic methodology -
econometrics, optimization and equilibrium - confine the pathways of thinking
among practitioners of the dismal science. Each of these three work against the
better practice of economics, and are deserving of blog articles of their own.
As a result of a narrow-minded methodology,
economists often have a limited and rigid world view. The world has to possess
certain properties, and behave in certain ways, in order to be the square peg
that fits a square hole. If the world is a round peg, the economist either
shies away from analyzing it - escaping into microeconomic sophistry - or
performs his work and is surprised when the world refuses to comply. (This
latter case has many examples which I will return to later.)
With this in mind, it was hardly surprising to read the Wall Street Journal's article "Economists Grapple with Public Disdain" from January 9, 2017 (the online version was published on January 8.) Reports the Journal:
The
nation's leading economists are suffering an identity crisis as many of the
insttitutions they helped build and causes they adanced have come in for
piublic schorn and rejection at the ballot box. ... Many economists have been
champtions of free trade and globalization, ideas under assault among rising
populst movements in advanced economies around the world. The rise of
[President] Donal Trump, with fierce rhetoric against elites, in particular,
left many at [the annual AEA] conference questioning their place in the
world.
This identity crisis is formulated succinctly by
University of Chicago economist Steve Davis, who is quoted as saying "I
used to think facts and analysis will ultimately carry the day but now I'm not
quite sure."
This statement is refreshing, as it is part of an
effort to fundamentally rethink the role of economics in the real world.
However, that rethinking process should not include questioning the "facts
and analysis" part. Here, Davis is taking a step in the wrong direction.
The question is not whether facts and analysis will prevail as the arbiter of
truth; the question is how you pursue those facts, what analysis you perform.
As an example, consider the austerity policies that
have been tormenting the Greek economy for a good long six years now. Initially,
the recommendation from reputable institutions, filled to the brim with
economists (the European Central Bank, the International Monetary Fund) of high
standing in the profession, was that: a) austerity was a good idea, and b) one
round of austerity should do it. Yet here we are, seven years after the first
austerity proposals were brought forward, and the Greek economy is nowhere
closer to recovering from its budget-and-growth crisis than it was when I published
my book Industrial Poverty in 2014. There, I expressed serious criticism of austerity
as practiced in Europe, predicting that it would only sink the continent
further into the macroeconomic wasteland of stagnation and despair.
Today, early 2017, the reputable economists at
those big institutions have been proven wrong more times than they would ever
admit – and I have been proven right. I do not mention this to brag, but to
make my case in response to the comment by Steven Davis: it is not analysis per
se that is wrong, but what kind of analysis you perform.
I do not use econometrics. I do not use equilibrium
theory. I use erstwhile tools developed by economists whose main contributions
are now older than half a century.
The decline of economics began when its
practitioners decided to try to turn into a discipline of quasi-natural science
stature. Econometrics, the roots of which emerged already in the 1920s, is not
a bad contribution – in fact, it has many merits and is definitely useful
within its confined proper space. A similar argument can be made for, and
against, optimization. But the pursuit of a physics-style credibility in
economics led economists to be seduced by the perceived rigor of correlative
studies and artful mathematics. They forgot the strict limiations of those
methods.
In order to measure the effects of austerity on an
economy, using mainstream economics methodology, economists must assume that
the economy is fundamentally a mechanical system. Variables that increase at a
given resistance will also decrease at that resistance. Yet that is not at all
how the economy works in real life. Specifically, on Greek austerity, it is not
the case that the economy will contract and expand at the same pace, with the
same “eagerness”. Yet you have to assume both of them in order to find a
smooth, rigorous solution in a traditional macroeconomic model.
There are quantitative methods that loosen these
restrictions. However, judging from the advice that economists of reputable
standing have been dispensing to the Greek government – and to other government
bodies involved – those methods have not been employed in this case.
Contrary to the confinement to mechanics, or
proxy-mechanics, required by mainstream economics methodology, the real world behaves
in such a way that:
a)
Consumers,
investors and entrepreneurs respond more rapidly to bad news than to good news
(with one important exception);
b)
Consumers, investors
and entrepreneurs can be overwhelmed with uncertainty and therefore change
their behavior entirely from what is “normal”; and
c)
When overcome with
fundamental uncertainty, economic agents can be unwilling to respond to good
news below a certain magnitude.
In order to understand, analyze and estimate the
reactions of an economy given these three points, a macroeconomist must learn
and master the relations between five concepts: consumption, investment,
saving, liquidity and uncertainty. Once he can master these five concepts, and
how they are related to each other, he has a platform to build good,
common-sense, reality-based macroeconomic analysis on. To be able to do that,
though, the modern economist in training – primarily the graduate student –
must be given room to study those concepts, their origins and their evolution.
That would be time taken away from the cul-de-sac methodology that, over the
past 30-35 years or so, has gradually removed economics from the real world.
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