Missing Links: Columns On The Surprises Of Globalization

Posted on Tuesday, April 11 at 12:13 by Ed Deak
Economists take pride in the sophisticated statistical techniques on which they rely to analyze phenomena such as growth, inflation, unemployment, trade, and even the long-term effects of abortion on crime rates. Many are convinced that their methods are more rigorous than those of all other social sciences and dismiss research that does not rest on quantitative methods as little more than “storytelling” or, worse, “glorified journalism.” Anthropologists, some economists jest, believe that the plural of anecdote is “data.” A survey published in the Journal of Economic Perspectives found that 77 percent of the doctoral candidates in the leading departments in the United States believe that “economics is the most scientific of the social sciences.” It turns out, however, that this certitude does not stem from how well they regard their own discipline but rather from their contempt for the other social sciences. Although they were nearly unanimous about the relative superiority of their profession, only 9 percent of the respondents were convinced that economists agree on fundamental issues. And they are right. Economists today are still grappling with basic questions for which they have no answers. Much more than fodder for academic squabbles, this uncertainty often has serious consequences. When economists err in theory, people suffer in practice. Fernando Henrique Cardoso, Brazil’s former president, recalls that in the midst of his country’s financial crisis, he received calls from experts at the International Monetary Fund, several Nobel laureates in economics, and other superstars in the economics firmament. Each offered different advice, and each sounded convinced that his or her recommendation was the only correct one. A distinguished sociologist, Cardoso managed to employ his considerable talents and experience to steer Brazil out of the crisis, ignoring the recommendations of several celebrity economists—some of whom had even urged him to adopt a fixed exchange-rate regime just like the one that Argentina’s recent crash has now discredited. “We do not really know what causes economic growth,” admits François Bourguignon, the chief economist at the World Bank. “We do have a good sense of what are the main obstacles to growth and what are the conditions without which an economy can’t grow. But we are far less sure about what are the other ingredients needed to create and sustain growth.” This bewilderment doesn’t just appear when economists confront the devilish problems of the developing world. Plenty of what goes on in the rich world also baffles them. I recently asked a well-regarded economist on Wall Street what puzzled her these days. “Interest rates,” she said. “They should be higher.” Sure enough, economic theory predicts that today’s long-term interest rates—the rates for mortgages or bonds that will be paid years from now—should be higher and heading upward because of an expanding U.S. economy and exploding fiscal and trade deficits. But the financial markets just won’t cooperate: Long-term interest rates have remained low and are actually heading down. Before retiring in January, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan described these trends as “a conundrum.” Robert Samuelson, a Washington Post columnist, surveyed the explanations that economists offer to explain this anomaly and found that they are all flawed. In his view, the experts’ inability to explain something so fundamental “attests to our economic ignorance.” http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3389 [Proofreader's note: this article was edited for spelling and typos on April 12, 2006]

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Comments

  1. Wed Apr 12, 2006 5:44 am
    <br />
    Thanks again Ed! <br />
    Somehow these guys just might figure into the picture<br />
    <br />
    <a href="http://www.indybay.org/news/2006/04/1814452.php">http://www.indybay.org/news/2006/04/1814452.php</a><br />
    <p>---<br>Real education must ultimately be limited to men who insist on knowing, the rest is mere sheep-herding. <br />
    Ezra Pound<br />
    The only good is knowledge...

  2. Wed Apr 12, 2006 6:34 am
    <a href="http://www.rense.com/general70/roth.htm">http://www.rense.com/general70/roth.htm</a><p>---<br>Real education must ultimately be limited to men who insist on knowing, the rest is mere sheep-herding. <br />
    Ezra Pound<br />
    The only good is knowledge...

  3. Wed Apr 12, 2006 4:19 pm
    What I find encouraging is that finally, at least some people are beginning to get up enough courage to get into print and say it openly that economics are not sciences, but pseudo religions and in the case of the presently ruling neoclassical free market economy system, an outright fraud and crime wave.

    I discovered this 21 years ago, when reading economics textbooks, and have to admit that I was scared stiff, consulting with scientists and other free thinkers, for 6 years before I dared to get into print. I just couldn't believe for years that such a major and open fraud can not only exist, but take over the world, with all governments fighting to jump on the bandwagon of self destruction.

    Now more and more people know and, thanks to the Net, are finally beginning to make a headway.

    Ed Deak, Big Lake, BC.

  4. Fri Apr 14, 2006 5:42 am
    Well I mean someone must be benefitting from it....bankers behind the scenes, the biggest businesses...it's not a farud for them.

    ---
    People who openly hate America, while making money from America, burning U.S. flags, waving Mexican and Jamaican flags, while demanding the right to be American



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