adbusters | Innovation feeds on diversity, but diversity is scarce in economics.
A little-remembered episode in the history of the discipline, told by
Tiago Mata in his dissertation at LSE, reveals how diversity was killed
in economics. Back in 1968, a group of young radical economists, the
product of the campus unrest of the 60s and the anti-war movement, came
to rock the discipline. Organized by the Union for Radical Political
Economics, they called for a politicization of economics, accusing
fellow economists of ignoring the important questions and being
“instrumental to the elite’s attainment of its unjust ends.” They
rejected the “marginalist approach,” today’s mantra in economics, for
accepting the basic institutions of capitalism, and catering to improve
only its administration … marginally.
The front-guard of the group was at Harvard, where non-tenured
faculty Arthur MacEwan, Samuel Bowles, Herbert Gintis and Thomas
Weisskopf taught a course tellingly named “The capitalist system:
conflict and power.” Older Harvard faculty found the course a disgrace.
But these were still the 60s and economics was not yet economics.
Harvard-based John Kenneth Galbraith, a non-conventional political
economist, and a notable ally of the young radicals, was President of
the American Economic Association. Galbraith was wary of economics
becoming a system of belief and used his presidential address in 1972 to
support this “new and notably articulate generation of economists” that
was coming to ask politically-important questions. Not everyone agreed.
A campaign ensued the next few years to eradicate the young radicals
from top positions. Contract after contract and tenure after tenure were
denied, including to the Harvard four.
Among them, the most notable case was that of Sam Bowles, one of the
brightest economists of his generation, as confirmed by his later work.
His tenure candidacy was rejected by a nineteen to five vote in 1973. He
had received the support of the most prominent members of the
department, J.K. Galbraith, and Nobel-prize winners Wassily Leontief and
(yet to be) Kenneth Arrow. Albert Hirschman was one of the other two
who voted in his favor, as recounted by his biographer in a talk in
memoriam I recently attended in Boston and which brought the whole
Harvard affair to my attention.
Hirschman, a moderate economist, left Harvard bitter in 1974 for
Princeton and so did Leontief for NYU in 1975, after serving Harvard for
30 years, and mentoring such conservative heavyweights like Paul
Samuelson and Robert Solow. Galbraith retired in 1975 after half a
century at Harvard and Arrow departed for the West Coast. Bowles’ denial
of tenure and the departure of Leontief, Galbraith, Hirschmann and
Arrow brought an end to the notorious Harvard faculty battles between
moderates and conservatives, not only over tenures but also University
governance and student occupations, battles that had brought the
department to a stalemate in the early 70s.
The young radicals did not have the luck of their more established
elder supporters. They were relegated to universities of lesser
prestige, radical refuges such as the New School in New York and UMass
at Amherst. UMass offered Bowles the opportunity to set up an institute
and host other ousted young radicals from Harvard, Yale and beyond, such
as Marxists Stephen Resnick and Richard Wolff.
The American Economic Association judged that there was no political
motivation behind the purge of the radicals, other than in cases where
the FBI was found to be involved. The rationale, however, often used in
many faculty decisions to deny the quality of the radicals’ research was
that it was “political” and not scientific enough. Science and
objectivity in economics came to be defined through these tenure battles
not only as mathematical formalism (in this people like Bowles and
Gintis excelled), but as one of a particular kind, based on the
so-called “neo-classical” assumptions of a world consisting of selfish
individuals maximizing their personal gain. This pre-analytic vision of a
world of neo-liberal subjects was considered neutral, but deviations
from it ideologically-motivated.
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