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Issue no. 52, 10 March 2010:
Pragmatism versus economics ideology: China versus Russia
David Ellerman
Over a decade has passed since the hey-day of Western assistance to the post-socialist
transition countries. We can now look back and clearly see the role that the ideology
of conventional economics played in the transition. Again and again, pragmatic
alternatives were ignored in favor of an institutional blitzkreg or shock therapy
to quickly “install” textbook/cartoon models of legal and economic institutions
with extensive negative consequences. This history is critically reviewed but,
more importantly, we also outline the intellectual basis for pragmatic approaches to social learning.
Racism and Economics:
Free enterprise and the economics of slavery
Marvin Brown
Of the many contradictions we witness between fact and fiction, few would rank more significant
today than the contradiction between the small town image commonly used to represent the essence
of free enterprise and the real context of early capitalism—the Atlantic trade among the peoples
of Europe, Africa, and the Americas. Here is the fiction:
It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker, that we expect our dinner,
but from their regard to their own self-interest. We address ourselves, not to their humanity but
to their self-love, and never talk to them of our own necessities but of their advantages.
Such a context is not so difficult to imagine. Small shop owners provide different
goods to each other, and the best way of doing this is for each to be guided by one’s
self-interest, since in this intimate setting, it is certainly in one’s self-interest
to provide a good product at a good price. How nice that we so easily
do what is best for us and it turns out best for our neighbors.
Why some countries are poor and some rich - a non-Eurocentric view
Deniz Kellecioglu
All human beings are equal. This is the politically correct position around the world today.
The position holds that individual value must correspond to individual characteristics,
and not to ethnicity, gender, sexuality, disability, religion, and so on. And since
discrimination is wrong based on those kinds of background features, it is understood
that all kinds of human beings have the same potential ability in all aspects of life.
Of course, in reality, there are many different perspectives and approaches to this
position. What is worse, the vast majority of the human population does not seem to
hold that position to be true. Different degrees of racism and prejudice dominate
societies all around the world. The consequences are clear and present for every
disadvantaged human being. The discriminated people usually posses less political
power, lower social status and acceptability, and endure lower economic standards.
Ethnic polarizations are a common element in most societies. They vary from segregated
public spheres, to discrimination for jobs, to ethnic cleansing.
Perceived ethnic differences also often spark wars.
Declaring victory at half time
Steve Keen
"Declaring victory at half-time" is a syndrome which afflicts the entire debate
(and debates within the debate: see Appendix) over our current economic situation:
optimists are of the opinion that the crisis is all over now, while pessimists think
it's only just begun. On this front, as always, I regard history as the best
indicator of who may be right, and I can't commend highly enough the site News
from 1930, which from January 1 2009 began publishing summaries of the Wall
Street Journal from January 1 1930. The last few entries include these
pearls of wisdom from February 1931:
Modern finance, methodology and the Global Crisis
Esteban Pérez Caldentey and Matías Vernengo
This paper presents an analysis of the international financial crisis of 2007-2009
and demonstrates that behavioural (non-rational) expectations were all pervasive during
the housing and the financial cycle. It concludes that this behavioural explanation
is distinct from accounts of market fundamentalism, which tend to emphasize only
forces such as financial regulation, financialization and monetary policy. Moreover,
it concludes that the impact of conventional and pseudo-diagnostic evaluations that
were inherent in rational models of risk-management during the crisis is reminiscent
of Keynes’s notion of conventional expectations. This implies that the crisis
was marked also by a “Keynes moment” that stands as a distinct process within
the so-called “Minsky moment”.
A Keynes moment in the Global Financial Collapse
Thodoris Koutsobinas
This paper presents an analysis of the international financial crisis of 2007-2009
and demonstrates that behavioural (non-rational) expectations were all pervasive during
the housing and the financial cycle. It concludes that this behavioural explanation is
distinct from accounts of market fundamentalism, which tend to emphasize only forces
such as financial regulation, financialization and monetary policy. Moreover, it
concludes that the impact of conventional and pseudo-diagnostic evaluations that
were inherent in rational models of risk-management during the crisis is reminiscent
of Keynes’s notion of conventional expectations. This implies that the crisis
was marked also by a “Keynes moment” that stands as a distinct process within
the so-called “Minsky moment”.
Tragedy, law, and rethinking our financial markets
David A. Westbrook
The twentieth century man of affairs and pivotal corporation law scholar Adolf Berle
is said to have aspired to be the Marx of the capitalist classes. What we need now is
more like the Walter Benjamin of the capitalist classes. Benjamin was a painfully
insightful critic, and a great interpreter of, among other things, Berthold Brecht,
who wrote Threepenny Opera, a scathing attack on capitalism that was a huge
commercial success. All of which is meant to suggest that current events present
financial policy intellectuals not least with problems in interpretation, issues
of how to engage or interrogate – literally how to begin thinking about –
the largest financial crisis in several generations.
Whither economics? What do we tell the students?
Peter Radford
It is commonplace knowledge that the profession known as economics is in a state of disarray.
There are fractures opening up between schools of thought, and lines being drawn between
various camps, that make some of the tussles of the past look benign. There is a war going on.
Standing, as I do, on the outside of academia, but once having held the title of “Chief Economist”,
I look on with a mix of horror, concern, and fear. I wonder what the outcome will be, and I
wonder whether economists have forgotten along the way that they are not just
working in the field, but are custodians of it as well.
I think economics is a public good in the sense that society as a
whole relies upon the expertise and advice of professional economists.
They own it just as much as we do. The last few months are testimony to
the vital part the profession plays in society’s day to day living. We owe
it to society to get it right. Or we should simply shut up and go away.
We should not be throwing bricks at each other in the full view of the very
people whose livelihoods might be deeply affected by the advice we give.
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