New School Economic Review

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Back from holidays, with orthodox neoclassicism

by Benjamin on September 6, 2010

This blog, like many others has been quiet over the summer months. But now school’s in, and so is Peter Radford’s (2010: 112) term “orthodox neoclassicism.” We used to speak of the economic orthodoxy and that was the neoclassical school of economics… But with a crisis and the amazing adaptability of neoclassicism, we now have orthodox neoclassicism. So there must be some heterodox neoclassicism out there as well? Of course there is. Behavioural economics, imperfect information analysis and feminist economics could all – I think – fall into the category of micro-based analysis from one or two utility maximizing agents representing the world. The danger with all this, is that any dissent towards this type of model will be lost in what is becoming a theoretical debate between one type of neoclassical economics and another, as Hugh Goodacre points out, in reference to Stiglitz’s 20 August FT article:

The attempt by Joseph Stiglitz to portray himself as an intellectual underdog is unconvincing. He represents the “mainstream” paradigm against which he claims to be rebelling in caricature terms as the crudest possible version of the “efficient markets hypothesis”… Prof. Stiglitz’s “new paradigm” is in fact just an updated version of the market fundamentalism it claims to replace: have faith in markets – if they break down, you can fix them. (Goodacre, 23 Aug. 2010, in the Financial Times)

There is a danger here: Just like the perfectly informed rational agent was replaced by a ‘revolutionary’ backward looking agent – changing little of substance in the theory. We may now be watching a change from one neoclassical doctrine to another. One that will be more informative and interesting I am sure, but one which will continue to propagate the same old myths, with the same old disdain for empirical investigation and fieldwork. I could be wrong. I hope so. Welcome back  :)

Posted 1 year, 8 months ago at 08:45.

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FT asks: What is the point of economists?

by Benjamin on July 29, 2009

Today’s blog debate in the Financial Times Arena asks a simple and provocative question: “What is the point of economists?”

“Why did no one see the crisis coming?” Queen Elizabeth asked last year. “A failure of the collective imagination of many bright people” who were all “doing their job properly on its own merit”, was the answer many of those bright people gave in a letter to the Queen last week.

If the economics profession could not warn the public about the credit crunch and the recession, what is the profession’s raison d’etre? Did this reflect, as some claim, that economics has gone astray with models that no longer help understand economic reality but rather distort it? Did such models even contribute to the crisis? FT writers and outside experts will set out their views in the posts below. What is the point of economists? What do you think? Click on the “62 comments” button to take part.

As one might expect, the debate is ongoing and interesting, but I have to admit that some answers in particular struck me. The argument was that the problem started in Finance, and Economics and Finance only mesh at the micro level, so “very few financial people cared because they knew nothing about macroeconomics” (comment 3), others are pretty adamant that “A lot of people were really good at math, but very poor at history” (comment 5, 7,… etc).

Posted 2 years, 9 months ago at 06:25.

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