New School Economic Review

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Don’t blame the economists for the crisis…

by Benjamin on May 1, 2009

Noted by Stephen Kinsella, Barry Eichengreen just published a long list of points arguing that the economy came undone through the action of bankers, bad theory, institutional biases, business schools, misunderstanding the markets and so forth…  But one group of people are not to blame: the economists… no no, says Eichengreen, blame the users of economic theory:

the problem was a partial and blinkered reading of that literature. The consumers of economic theory, not surprisingly, tended to pick and choose those elements of that rich literature that best supported their self-serving actions.

Dont point teh finger at economists... We pointed it at you first

Don't point the finger at economists... We pointed it at you first

The economists were good people who tried to model behaviour, risk, incentives and agent behaviour, all of which was useful. “What got us into this mess, in other words, were not the limits of scholarly imagination” it was those fools who used our work. If any complaint should be laid at the door of economists, we might say that

Equally reprehensibly, the producers of that theory, benefiting in ways both pecuniary and psychic, showed disturbingly little tendency to object.

We built it in good faith, and failed to protest how it was later implemented… You know, Guns don’t kill people, apes with guns kill people – so don’t blame the good and honest gun maker. This all echoes today’s  BBC coverage and British Parliament blaming bankers (and users of economic theory) for making an “Astonishing mess” of the economy…

Can we be honest and say that standard economic theory has not really tried to deal with the economy over the last many years, and that is where the problem started? (If we were paying attention to the economy, we might have noticed some of those policies…) The problem is not with the user, who can only use what is given to them, but with the producers of thousands upon thousands of pages re-affirming the veracity of  Value at Risk models, stable monetary regimes with long run equilibria and econometric sophistry showing the emergence of the Great Moderation, a new ‘plateu of economic stability’ (as Fischer infamously called the U.S. economy two weeks before the great 1929 crash…)

Eichengreen himself is more diplomatic about it. Even though he doesn’t want to lay the problem at the feet of the economics profession, his final paragraphs which aim to look forward, inevitably needs to discard the economics professions approach in the late 20th century. What we have been doing was too unrealistic and too ‘malleable’ – meaning always returning to a stable fictional equilibrium – and it needs to make space for empirically grounded models which use history and institutions, while economics begins to weed out the purely abstract thinking.

The late twentieth century was the heyday of deductive economics. Talented and facile theorists set the intellectual agenda. Their very facility enabled them to build models with virtually any implication, which meant that policy makers could pick and choose at their convenience. Theory turned out to be too malleable, in other words, to provide reliable guidance for policy.

In contrast, the twenty-first century will be the age of inductive economics, when empiricists hold sway and advice is grounded in concrete observation of markets and their inhabitants. Work in economics, including the abstract model building in which theorists engage, will be guided more powerfully by this real-world observation. It is about time.

About time indeed, and maybe in ten years he will write it in unequivocal terms.

Posted 3 years ago at 10:27.

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All assumptions are not born equal

by Benjamin on February 17, 2009

All assumptions are not born equal, but  it is not enough to just find the ‘simplest’ assumption in reverence to Occam’s Razor or most unrealistic assumption as Friedman suggests. I think it is time we distinguish between two types of assumptions. The first is of the kind which cannot be directly observed, and the second is of a nature which is a fixture in the economy. This may sound like structural / institutional analysis re-hashed, but hear me out. The former will still need unrealistic assumptions, but the latter should be purged.

My immediate point of reference is the money markets. Why do we assume in the ‘simplest’ case that money supply is a quantity set by a central bank with interest rates determined by demand? and in the best assumed scenario we argue that money supply is a function of the interest rate and demand? This makes no sense to me, as we can immediately verify how the money markets work: The central bank sets an interest rate for repurchase agreements (sometimes adjusted twice a day), banks borrow the amount of money they need to cover positions taken during the day and then offer the central bank collateral to borrow either in cooperation with other banks (in the UK) or individually (in the US). There is no need to assume very much about money supply, it’s all there, fixed in the economy, and yet we ignore such information in our theories. I would suggest that this has created a massive blind-spot in economic theory, as we are unable to explain the liquidity crunch and the current shortage of lending.  The money supply increases we witnessed in the fall were the only policy conclusions we could find based on such faulty a premise. 

“A small Difference in the first principles (especially of Hypothetical Arguments) always making a vast disagreement in the Conclusion”
Andrew Hooke 1750: 11

“The results of any theory depend on its assumptions – and if the assumptions depart too far from reality, policies based on that model are likely to go far awry.”
Joseph Stiglitz, 2006: 28-29

This issue of assumptions came up as I was reading through Andrew Hooke’s arguments about the national debts, and found a quote which rang true for both myself, the discipline, and Mr Stiglitz – so how do we start to integrate such knowledge into the underlying assumptions of our models is the question?

Andrew Hooke. 1750. An Essay on the National Debt, and National Capital: Or, the account truly stated, Debtor and Creditor. London: W. Owen at Homer’s Head.
Joseph Stiglitz. 2006. 
Making Globalization Work. London, England: , Penguin Books


Posted 3 years, 3 months ago at 08:30.

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