American Autumn

The New Spirit of Economics

Full of magic, mystery, and animal spirits once again.
The New Spirit of Economics

Rafiqur Rahman - Reuters

Audio version read by George Atherton – Right-click to download

This article is available in:

Economics wasn’t always the science it now claims to be. In fact, not so long ago what now is called big E economics was once magical, mysterious and altogether profound. John Maynard Keynes, the architect of America’s recovery from the Great Depression and champion of the welfare state, believed that at its core, economics is ruled by “animal spirits.” That is to say that the free, equal and rational mind of consumers in the Locke/Smith economic paradigm does not sufficiently explain human action in the market place; that economies operate more according to Freudian animal heritage, or esoteric and emotional impulses, than reason. Other thinkers from this formative economic era, like Joseph Schumpeter, sensed that a violent, warlike impulse of “creative destruction” lurked at the heart of capitalism. And Karl Marx, the great dreamer, proposed that economic theory, rather than empowering and rewarding the selfish gene, could instead create a better social realm in which every person gave according to his abilities and received according to his needs.

But around the 1950s, when the logical positivists were strutting their philosophy of strict rationality, applying scientific method to social phenomena, economists started distancing themselves from psychological and sociological considerations. They liked to think of themselves as real scientists, and over the next few generations they rationalized human behavior, sanitized their theories and models, and tried to transform economics into a mathematically driven exact discipline on the model of physics.

Today, as Gregory Mankiw’s widely used first year university economics textbook, Principles of Economics, shows, the “common weal” discipline has been reduced to a dry, boring, amoral and inhuman study full of pseudo formulas and cumbersome equations with little connection to ethical questions or social desirability. Graph upon graph on page after page of Principles of Economics reveal just how far economics has drifted from the poetry and prose of its roots – that often misread bible of global finance, Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations – to the purposely obtuse and elite math of today.

Along the way, a host of radical (though not really radical – just traditional) thinkers tried to warn the logic freaks of economics that their profession was heading into a dead end. Nobel Prize winner Wassily Leontief said: “Departments of economics are graduating a generation of idiot savants, brilliant at esoteric mathematics yet innocent of actual economic life.” Author of The Origin of Economic Ideas, Guy Routh wrote: “The standard economic texts are powerful instruments of disorientation; for confusing the mind and preparing it for the acceptance of myths of growing complexity and unreality.” And the great American economist and historian Robert Heilbroner, famously warned: “Before economics can progress it must abandon its suicidal formalism.”

But to no avail… for half a century, these warnings have fallen on deaf ears.

So here we are. Great Depression 2.0 and finally the mystery of economics is again awakening from its long logical slumber. In the panic of escalating financial and ecological meltdown, the old certitudes are crumbling and the logic freaks are everywhere in retreat. In 2008 Bush-era Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, the man who oversaw much of America’s financial nose dive, told the public “those of us who have looked to the self-interest of lending institutions to protect share-holders’ equity, myself included, are in a state of shocked disbelief.” That’s putting it mildly. As the top economist in the nation for two decades, groomed in 50 years of rigorous positivism, such naïvety was as appalling as it was telling of the false science being sold to people. What Greenspan’s reflections show is that the Newtonian law of positivist economics – the self-interest principle, the "rational maximizer" at the heart of economics – is profoundly flawed. It should now go without saying that carrying on with business as usual in economics would be equivalent to physics without relativity or thermodynamics.

For a scientific experiment to cross the threshold from speculation to truth it must pass the repeatability test. For an outcome to be considered true, one must be able make it happen again. In their quest to be regarded as real scientists (lab coat and all) rather than ideologues, the positivist economic theorists so far have only been able to reproduce one major economic phenomenon – Depression. This is a sign that the only provable thesis in their pseudo inquiry is that unrestrained market liberalism leads to short term financial gain for the wealthiest members of society followed by periods of economic collapse.

As the global economic and ecological crises bear down upon us, positivists are being forced to admit that their understanding of nonlinear, real-world systems is frail at best and that their mathematical models have very limited value. Today every aspect of economics, right down to its fundamental tenets and axioms – growth, freedom, progress, happiness, self-interest – are now being rethought. The economic profession is entering an almost Nietzschean period of creative destruction.

This is the perfect moment to give the logic freaks one final push into the dustbin of history. We the heterodox economists, ecological economists and not-so-radical professors and students at universities around the world can kick over the old neoclassical paradigm and pave the way toward a new kind of economics – a psychonomics, a bionomics, a barefoot economics – a wide-ranging, multifaceted, human-scale discipline full of magic, mystery and animal spirits once again.

Kalle Lasn and Darren Fleet

98 comments on the article “The New Spirit of Economics”

Displaying 81 - 90 of 98

Page 9 of 10

Israel as Warning

It has become commonplace to compare the militarized ghettos of Gaza and the West Bank, with their concrete walls, electrified fences and checkpoints, to the Bantustan system in South Africa, which kept blacks in ghettos and demanded passes when they left. "Israel's laws and practices in the Occupied Palestinian Territories certainly resemble aspects of apartheid," said John Dugard, the South African lawyer who is the UN's special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories, in February 2007. The similarities are stark, but there are differences too. South Africa's Bantustans were essentially work camps, a way to keep African laborers under tight surveillance and control so they would work cheaply in the mines. What Israel has constructed is a system designed to do the opposite: to keep workers from working, a network of open holding pens for millions of people who have been categorized as surplus humanity.

Palestinians are not the only people in the world who have been so categorized: millions of Russians also became surplus in their own country, which is why so many fled their homes in hope of finding a job and a decent life in Israel. Although the original Bantustans have been dismantled in South Africa, the one in four people who live in shacks in fast-expanding slums are also surplus in the new, neoliberal (a free-market conservative ideology that has nothing to do with liberalism - named such for the purpose of confusion) South Africa. This discarding of 25-60% of the population has been the hallmark of the Chicago School crusade since the "misery villages" began mushrooming throughout the Southern Cone in the seventies. In South Africa, Russia and New Orleans the rich build walls around themselves. Israel has taken this disposal process one step further: it has built walls around the dangerous poor.

From "The Shock Doctrine" by Naomi Klein, author of "No Logo"

Israel as Warning

It has become commonplace to compare the militarized ghettos of Gaza and the West Bank, with their concrete walls, electrified fences and checkpoints, to the Bantustan system in South Africa, which kept blacks in ghettos and demanded passes when they left. "Israel's laws and practices in the Occupied Palestinian Territories certainly resemble aspects of apartheid," said John Dugard, the South African lawyer who is the UN's special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories, in February 2007. The similarities are stark, but there are differences too. South Africa's Bantustans were essentially work camps, a way to keep African laborers under tight surveillance and control so they would work cheaply in the mines. What Israel has constructed is a system designed to do the opposite: to keep workers from working, a network of open holding pens for millions of people who have been categorized as surplus humanity.

Palestinians are not the only people in the world who have been so categorized: millions of Russians also became surplus in their own country, which is why so many fled their homes in hope of finding a job and a decent life in Israel. Although the original Bantustans have been dismantled in South Africa, the one in four people who live in shacks in fast-expanding slums are also surplus in the new, neoliberal (a free-market conservative ideology that has nothing to do with liberalism - named such for the purpose of confusion) South Africa. This discarding of 25-60% of the population has been the hallmark of the Chicago School crusade since the "misery villages" began mushrooming throughout the Southern Cone in the seventies. In South Africa, Russia and New Orleans the rich build walls around themselves. Israel has taken this disposal process one step further: it has built walls around the dangerous poor.

From "The Shock Doctrine" by Naomi Klein, author of "No Logo"

Anonymous

BOY, those kids look happy. Happier than a lot of American kids zoned out on video games and television. Western economics is based on math, profits, and graphs - how people are treated is not important here and you can figure that out by reading some of the posts on these Adbusters web pages. People are more concerned about yelling at Occupy protesters and don't really care at all about the state of suffering Americans. Home got foreclosed? Who cares! Look at how the Occupy people are costing local businesses money! Look at all the money they are costing taxpayers: all those cuts to the police departments and now look what cops HAVE to do (don't ever question whether or not it was worth it - if the gov. pays cops all your tax money then they don't have to have any excuse for doing so) to PROTECT THE MONEY that is most important to businesses. Save the money - ignore the people? Who cares if you are personally ok!? How was growth this quarter?

Anonymous

BOY, those kids look happy. Happier than a lot of American kids zoned out on video games and television. Western economics is based on math, profits, and graphs - how people are treated is not important here and you can figure that out by reading some of the posts on these Adbusters web pages. People are more concerned about yelling at Occupy protesters and don't really care at all about the state of suffering Americans. Home got foreclosed? Who cares! Look at how the Occupy people are costing local businesses money! Look at all the money they are costing taxpayers: all those cuts to the police departments and now look what cops HAVE to do (don't ever question whether or not it was worth it - if the gov. pays cops all your tax money then they don't have to have any excuse for doing so) to PROTECT THE MONEY that is most important to businesses. Save the money - ignore the people? Who cares if you are personally ok!? How was growth this quarter?

Whatever

My God are people really saying "but you aren't en economist so I can't believe anything you are saying"!?

Why... why are people so stupid... why can't they use their logic on THEMSELVES the same way they use it on other people?

Excuse me, but are you an expert on standing up? Maybe you shouldn't stand up. Are you an expert on cleaning? Then I don't think your dishes are really clean. Are you a NASCAR driver? Then I don't think you should drive. Are you a language professor? Then you shouldn't use languages! My God. My GOD. How are people so blank and ignorant that they can't understand that WHAT YOU APPLY TO OTHER PEOPLE GOES DOUBLY FOR YOURSELF?????? Logic has one way of working. You don't just make up logic as you go. Logic works the way I have just described. If you can say something about other people, then you are also saying it about yourself. Duh. If you are asking people to tell you info about something, that means YOU CAN ALSO GO LEARN ABOUT IT - you don't really need any info if you are too lazy to get it yourself.

Whatever

My God are people really saying "but you aren't en economist so I can't believe anything you are saying"!?

Why... why are people so stupid... why can't they use their logic on THEMSELVES the same way they use it on other people?

Excuse me, but are you an expert on standing up? Maybe you shouldn't stand up. Are you an expert on cleaning? Then I don't think your dishes are really clean. Are you a NASCAR driver? Then I don't think you should drive. Are you a language professor? Then you shouldn't use languages! My God. My GOD. How are people so blank and ignorant that they can't understand that WHAT YOU APPLY TO OTHER PEOPLE GOES DOUBLY FOR YOURSELF?????? Logic has one way of working. You don't just make up logic as you go. Logic works the way I have just described. If you can say something about other people, then you are also saying it about yourself. Duh. If you are asking people to tell you info about something, that means YOU CAN ALSO GO LEARN ABOUT IT - you don't really need any info if you are too lazy to get it yourself.

Anonymous

One doesn’t need a PhD in finance to figure out who is sucking blood out of the American taxpayers. One just has to look at the latest report published by the US-based credit rating agency, Standard and Poor’s. The agency which had down-graded the US to A-minus a month ago – has raised Israel’s credit rating to A-plus.

However, according to latest OECD report, the Zionist entity has the second highest poverty rate among the OECD countries. One in every four residents in Israel lives below the poverty line, more than twice the average of Western countries (the average poverty rate in developed countries is 11.1%). The major victims being Israeli children; 36.3% of Israeli children live in poverty (850,300 children).

The report says – 46.2 million Americans are now living in poverty. The number of those living in poverty in America has grown by 2.6 million in just the last 12 months. Back in the year 2000, 11.3% of all Americans were living in poverty. Today, 15.1% of all Americans are living in poverty. The last time the poverty level was this high was back in 1993.

The United States has a child poverty rate that is more than twice as high as many European nations. Currently, one out of every five children in the US is living in poverty........

http://rehmat1.wordpress.com/2011/09/17/economy-us-a-minus-israel-a-plus/

Anonymous

One doesn’t need a PhD in finance to figure out who is sucking blood out of the American taxpayers. One just has to look at the latest report published by the US-based credit rating agency, Standard and Poor’s. The agency which had down-graded the US to A-minus a month ago – has raised Israel’s credit rating to A-plus.

However, according to latest OECD report, the Zionist entity has the second highest poverty rate among the OECD countries. One in every four residents in Israel lives below the poverty line, more than twice the average of Western countries (the average poverty rate in developed countries is 11.1%). The major victims being Israeli children; 36.3% of Israeli children live in poverty (850,300 children).

The report says – 46.2 million Americans are now living in poverty. The number of those living in poverty in America has grown by 2.6 million in just the last 12 months. Back in the year 2000, 11.3% of all Americans were living in poverty. Today, 15.1% of all Americans are living in poverty. The last time the poverty level was this high was back in 1993.

The United States has a child poverty rate that is more than twice as high as many European nations. Currently, one out of every five children in the US is living in poverty........

http://rehmat1.wordpress.com/2011/09/17/economy-us-a-minus-israel-a-plus/

firstoccupier1981

Occupiers, It sounds like to me we are ready to improve the middle, and working class financial condition and the Main St. economy. As the first occupier I have been working on decreasing the wealth gap since 1981. I am an economic scholar, author and retired small businessman. I am Chairman of a special Committee For Economic Reform and A Better Economic Future. A better future; Isn't this what we're all working towards? You say you have the brightest minds of several generations standing by. Well lets put them to work getting out the word that there is a better way to prosperity than what either of the Republicans or the Democrats are proposing. Cuts in vital programs is not the answer. Neither is massive deficit spending Keynesian Economic Policies. Then what is the solution? Have your brightest minds look over the information posted at www.foreclosurecrisissolved.wordpress.com/ www.recoverygovforthepeople.wordpress.com/ and economysflaw.wordpress.com/ Read: "People's Economic Recovery Plan, A Private Sector Solution To Job Creation and Economic Recovery," and "Eliminate The Fed Income Tax and Six Other Fixes For our Economy" to start with. Then get back to me. [email protected] We will let President Obama, Congress, and the 1% know where the real power is!!

edit reply

firstoccupier1981

Occupiers, It sounds like to me we are ready to improve the middle, and working class financial condition and the Main St. economy. As the first occupier I have been working on decreasing the wealth gap since 1981. I am an economic scholar, author and retired small businessman. I am Chairman of a special Committee For Economic Reform and A Better Economic Future. A better future; Isn't this what we're all working towards? You say you have the brightest minds of several generations standing by. Well lets put them to work getting out the word that there is a better way to prosperity than what either of the Republicans or the Democrats are proposing. Cuts in vital programs is not the answer. Neither is massive deficit spending Keynesian Economic Policies. Then what is the solution? Have your brightest minds look over the information posted at www.foreclosurecrisissolved.wordpress.com/ www.recoverygovforthepeople.wordpress.com/ and economysflaw.wordpress.com/ Read: "People's Economic Recovery Plan, A Private Sector Solution To Job Creation and Economic Recovery," and "Eliminate The Fed Income Tax and Six Other Fixes For our Economy" to start with. Then get back to me. [email protected] We will let President Obama, Congress, and the 1% know where the real power is!!

edit reply

Pages

Add a new comment

Comments are closed.