Home > Uncategorized > What’s the use of economics?

What’s the use of economics?

from Lars Syll

The simple question that was raised during a recent conference … was to what extent has – or should – the teaching of economics be modified in the light of the current economic crisis? The simple answer is that the economics profession is unlikely to change. Why would economists be willing to give up much of their human capital, painstakingly nurtured for over two centuries? For macroeconomists in particular, the reaction has been to suggest that modifications of existing models to take account of ‘frictions’ or ‘imperfections’ will be enough to account for the current evolution of the world economy. The idea is that once students have understood the basics, they can be introduced to these modifications.

However, other economists such as myself feel that we have finally reached the turning point in economics where we have to radically change the way we conceive of and model the economy. The crisis is an opportune occasion to carefully investigate new approaches … Rather than making steady progress towards explaining economic phenomena professional economists have been locked into a narrow vision of the economy. We constantly make more and more sophisticated models within that vision until, as Bob Solow put it, “the uninitiated peasant is left wondering what planet he or she is on” …

Every student in economics is faced with the model of the isolated optimising individual who makes his choices within the constraints imposed by the market … The student then moves on to macroeconomics and is told that the aggregate economy or market behaves just like the average individual she has just studied. She is not told that these general models in fact poorly reflect reality. For the macroeconomist, this is a boon since he can now analyse the aggregate allocations in an economy as though they were the result of the rational choices made by one individual. The student may find this even more difficult to swallow when she is aware that peoples’ preferences, choices and forecasts are often influenced by those of the other participants in the economy. Students take a long time to accept the idea that the economy’s choices can be assimilated to those of one individual.

Alan Kirman What’s the use of economics?

An economic theory that does not go beyond proving theorems and conditional ‘if-then’ statements — and do not make assertions and put forward hypotheses about real-world individuals and institutions — is of little consequence for anyone wanting to use theories to better understand, explain or predict real-world phenomena.

Building theories and models on patently ridiculous assumptions we know people never conform to, does not deliver real science. Real and reasonable people have no reason to believe in ‘as-if’ models of ‘rational’ robot-imitations acting and deciding in a Walt Disney-world characterised by ‘common knowledge,’ ‘full information,’ ‘rational expectations,’ zero transaction costs, given stochastic probability distributions, risk-reduced genuine uncertainty, and other laughable nonsense assumptions of the same ilk. Science fiction is not science.

For decades now, economics students have been complaining about the way economics is taught. Their complaints are justified. Force-feeding young and open-minded people with unverified and useless autistic mainstream theories and models cannot be the right way to develop a relevant and realist economic science.

Much work done in mainstream theoretical economics is devoid of any explanatory interest. And not only that. Seen from a strictly scientific point of view, it has no value at all. It is a waste of time. And as so many have been experiencing in modern times of austerity policies and market fundamentalism — a very harmful waste of time.

  1. July 21, 2018 at 5:25 pm

    I cannot understand why there is not more discussion of Knight’s work, which gives us plenty of ideas about a useful economics. Kirman et al’s comments add little to Coase’s life-long Knight-inflected exhortations that ‘economics had to change’.

  2. Yok
    July 21, 2018 at 5:54 pm

    You guys got to be kidding me. Economics is the most intellectually corrupted field of human research and study. A Big, Bad, Joke. Take the Mystro and all his help at the Fed, and all the help at Treasury. All those top notch economists. With all the resources at their disposal. All the economists at academia. And you couldn’t predict the biggest and most destructive financial and economic event in 79 years. They contributed to it instead. What good are you? You guys don’t have a predictive power. An astro-physicist can tell you when the sun formed, how, it composition and temperature throughout its’ volume, when and how it will come to an end, the nature of the nuclear reactions taking place. For the most part you guys are PR people for the wealthy and powerful that run things. The most successful of you are political hacks. Too close to politics and how the pie is divided up. They put you on a mission of chasing your tails.

  3. lobdillj
    July 21, 2018 at 6:06 pm

    Bravo, Lars! May I suggest MMT?

  4. econoclast
    July 21, 2018 at 7:02 pm

    Good post.
    I have one quibble: “Why would economists be willing to give up much of their human capital …?”
    The term “human capital”, as does the term “natural capital” relegates living entities to the category of exploitable “resources”. This sort of thinking must change if we are to develop a truly new economics and if we are to train future economists.
    I get that we all are subject to the power of capital. That does not mean we must accept these old, outdated, and wrong concepts that dismiss the power of people, other living things, and the systems that connect us.

  5. David Harold Chester
    July 21, 2018 at 8:40 pm

    Macroeconomics has an important use because it allows people to understand how our social system works.This knowledge might then be used to take political decisions which might be of benefit to the whole community. Unfortunately there are too many “might”s in this reasoning for there to be much use possible for its application to our system–for it to readily adopt and it will be some time before the common knowledge of the subject can democratically be expressed by the introduction of good government.

  6. July 21, 2018 at 9:28 pm

    Economies are graphs. Study them as graphs (networks).

  7. Manuel Angeles
    July 21, 2018 at 11:25 pm

    “a very harmful waste of time”. For most people(s) it is very harmful indeed. For the few, not so. Take for instance “marginal productivities” as the sources of wages and profits…..Mystification writ enormous!

  8. Craig
    July 22, 2018 at 1:26 am

    Systemic austerity and individual and commercial monetary scarcity can be alleviated by a single policy of both a high percentage (say 40-50%) discount to prices for consumers and a rebating of that discount back to the commercial agent giving the discount….at the points of sale from one business model to the next and at final retail sale. That single gracious and abundance creating policy would do more to stabilize modern economies than all of the calculus and theoretical figure-figure that has been continually mulled over for over a decade since the SHTF in 2008.

  9. Helen Sakho
    July 22, 2018 at 2:16 am

    Extremely harmful waste of all resources, especially of the most precious one, TIME itself. It is extraordinary that the theory of relatively was explained so scientifically and yet so simply as a conversation on a park bench between two people, using the example of how time could last a few minutes or a lifetime. Theories, conferences, books, graphs that are designed on time-wasting exercises are designed to do exactly that. What a waste of time! And the wastefulness has a habit of perpetuating itself through future stooges of funding regimes, avoiding the catastrophic situation that we are in.

  10. July 28, 2018 at 6:45 am

    Lars depends on who you ask. For economists such as Milton Friedman and Friedrich Hayek economics is about making a world based on individual liberty and classical liberalism (only some of which today’s political liberals accept). They wanted an economics structure that both contained and supported these ends. Robert Solow preached that economic growth makes the world safe and helps everybody. Robert Heilbroner invented the classification of economies still used today – Traditional (primarily agriculturally based, perhaps subsistence economy), Command (centrally planned economy, often involving the state), Market (capitalism), or Mixed. He preferred mixed but shortly before his death stated that capitalism had won and now controlled the world. Paul Samuelson is often called the father of modern economics. He invented “new” Keynesianism. Samuelson considered mathematics the “natural language” for economists and set out the mathematical foundations of economics in his book Foundations of Economic Analysis. Samuelson also authored the best-selling economics textbook ever, “Economics: An Introductory Analysis,” first published in 1948. So, pick your purpose. Some economist is likely to support it. That says nothing, of course about how these economic archetypes are presented and manipulated by corporations and politicians.

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