project-syndicate | One of the dirty secrets of economics is that there is no such thing as
“economic theory.” There is simply no set of bedrock principles on which
one can base calculations that illuminate real-world economic outcomes.
We should bear in mind this constraint on economic knowledge as the
global drive for fiscal austerity shifts into top gear.
Unlike economists,
biologists, for example, know that every cell functions according to
instructions for protein synthesis encoded in its DNA. Chemists begin
with what the Heisenberg and Pauli principles, plus the
three-dimensionality of space, tell us about stable electron
configurations. Physicists start with the four fundamental forces of
nature.
Economists
have none of that. The “economic principles” underpinning their
theories are a fraud – not fundamental truths but mere knobs that are
twiddled and tuned so that the “right” conclusions come out of the
analysis.
The
“right” conclusions depend on which of two types of economist you are.
One type chooses, for non-economic and non-scientific reasons, a
political stance and a set of political allies, and twiddles and tunes
his or her assumptions until they yield conclusions that fit their
stance and please their allies. The other type takes the carcass of
history, throws it into the pot, turns up the heat, and boils it down,
hoping that the bones will yield lessons and suggest principles to guide
our civilization’s voters, bureaucrats, and politicians as they slouch
toward utopia.
Not surprisingly, I believe that only the second kind of economist has
anything useful to say. So what lessons does history have to teach us
about our current global economic predicament?
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