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No Return to Normal - James K. Galbraith
The deepest belief of the modern economist is that the economy is a self-stabilizing system. This means that, even if nothing is done, normal rates of employment and production will someday return. Practically all modern economists believe this, often without thinking much about it. (Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said it reflexively in a major speech in London in January: "The global economy will recover." He did not say how he knew.) The difference between conservatives and liberals is over whether policy can usefully speed things up. Conservatives say no, liberals say yes, and on this point Obama's economists lean left. Hence the priority they gave, in their first days, to the stimulus package.

...

Why did the CBO reach this conclusion? On depth, CBO's model is based on the postwar experience, and such models cannot predict outcomes more serious than anything already seen. If we are facing a downturn worse than 1982, our computers won't tell us; we will be surprised. And if the slump is destined to drag on, the computers won't tell us that either. Baked into the CBO model we find a "natural rate of unemployment" of 4.8 percent; the model moves the economy back toward that value no matter what. In the real world, however, there is no reason to believe this will happen. Some alternative forecasts, freed of the mystical return to "normal," now project a GDP gap twice as large as the CBO model predicts, and with no near-term recovery at all.

Ouch, ouch, ouch.

I recently came up with the following metaphor.

Economists reason in terms of a "general equilibrium" which they assume is stable. Picture the economy as a ball rolling inside a bowl, oscillating around the bottom point. Economists don't even concern themselves with the approach to equilibrium, which they assume is quick enough, or else they concern themselves with the "long term". So what they do is they study how the equilibrium point changes when you change some choice parameters.

Maybe a better metaphor for the economy would be a pencil balanced on its tip, or a ball rolling on the outside of an upside-down bowl. There is an equilibrium position on top, but it is unstable and in order to keep the ball at the top or the pencil balanced on your fingertip you have to carefully but vigorously move the bowl or the finger.

Most economists teach a theoretical framework that has been shown to be fundamentally useless. -- James K. Galbraith

by Carrie (migeru at eurotrib dot com) on Fri Mar 20th, 2009 at 05:35:51 AM EST
... that any general equilibrium modeling that involves a small number of equilibria with well behaved dynamics is itself theory requires absurdly heroic assumptions.

This was worked out in the high reaches of theory in the 1970's, just as the invalidity of using marginalist modeling of macroeconomic aggregates was established in the 1960's.

So we "know" that the only two ways to do conventional marginalist modeling are inapplicable to real world macroeconomies, and yet mainstream economists have to use one or the other, because those are the only two options that make use of their toolkit.

And to think that the failure of the bastardized Keynesian-marginalist models of Samuelson et al.   to be able to talk about the Oil Price Shocks of the 1970's were laid at the feet of the Keynesian side of the hybrid, when it turns out that marginalist modeling is incapable of adequately modeling the level of activity in the macroeconomy ... just as Keynes originally argued.

I've been accused of being a Marxist, yet while Harpo's my favourite, it's Groucho I'm always quoting. Odd, that.

by BruceMcF (agila61 at netscape dot net) on Sat Mar 21st, 2009 at 07:55:06 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Can you drop some jargon, names and references for
  • any general equilibrium modeling that involves a small number of equilibria with well behaved dynamics requires absurdly heroic assumptions (is that Arrow-Debreu?)
  • the invalidity of using marginalist modeling of macroeconomic aggregates


Most economists teach a theoretical framework that has been shown to be fundamentally useless. -- James K. Galbraith
by Carrie (migeru at eurotrib dot com) on Sun Mar 22nd, 2009 at 04:20:00 AM EST
[ Parent ]
Ackerman 1999 (pdf) does a good job of covering the (separate) work of Mantel and Debreu in 1974, elaborating on the work of this german guy whose name I can only remember by copying it from a source.

The collapse of aggregate marginalist modeling of the economy emerged into economic theory in the Cambridge Capital Controversies, when Sraffa's "Making Things Using Things You Made" (sic) was used to demolish the aggregation of heterogeneous real capital (productive equipment) to determine the real interest rate, since heterogeneous real capital defined in real terms cannot be guaranteed to give a capital supply curve heading up and to the right ...

... of course, aggregate demand for spending on heterogeneous real capital can be defined as a schedule determined based on a nominal interest rate, as Keynes did in the General Theory, but then the interest rates is an input to the productive sector from the finance sector (the price of liquidity), money is not neutral, and we are tossed into the real world where the economy does not automatically trend to full employment.


I've been accused of being a Marxist, yet while Harpo's my favourite, it's Groucho I'm always quoting. Odd, that.

by BruceMcF (agila61 at netscape dot net) on Sun Mar 22nd, 2009 at 11:48:33 AM EST
[ Parent ]

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