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A new economics?

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A new economics? What would it (not) look like? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A new economics?


1
A new economics?
  • What would it (not) look like?

2
A profound irony
  • Many critics of economics are fans of HET
    (History of Economic Thought)
  • Many fans of economics are critics of HET
  • Why study dead economists?
  • Often regard HET specialists as
  • antiquarians
  • intellectual dinosaurs, trying to preserve old
    ideas which have long since been superseded

But
3
What if
  • All existing economists were wiped out by a
    meteor
  • Economics had to start all over again from
    scratch
  • Would it evolve into anything like todays
    economics?

4
Who would help build it?
  • Mathematicians
  • Scientists
  • Physics
  • Biology
  • Chemistry
  • Computing
  • Engineers
  • Process
  • Production
  • Systems
  • Business professionals
  • Managers
  • Marketers
  • Social Scientists
  • Sociology
  • Psychology
  • Political Science

Would it have
5
Would it have
  • Utility maximising individuals?
  • No way!
  • Obvious information processing limitations
  • Computer science Curse of dimensionality
  • Number of combinations rises to the power of
    number of options
  • Choice of quantities of 2 goods, and say, between
    0 and 10 units of each?
  • 10 to power of 2 comparisons to budget, utility
    map just 100 combinations easy!
  • What about choice between combinations of, say,
    30 goods, with between 0 and 10 units of each?

6
Utility maximising individuals?
  • 1 million billion billion combinations
  • If budget obviously ruled out 99.9 of these if
    each evaluation took 1 billionth of a second
  • Process complete after 32 billion years
  • Maximum (est.) age of universe 20 billion years
  • Individual would take 1.6 times age of known
    universe to make utility maximising choice
  • Maximising utility in typical supermarket (1,000
    different items) doesnt bear contemplation
  • let alone millions of products in modern economy
  • Instead, intelligent partitioning of commodity
    space vital

7
Utility maximising individuals?
  • Sources of partitioning
  • Culture
  • some commodities not even contemplated (sea
    slugs, anyone?)
  • Income Needs
  • Fulfil hierarchy of wants from basic to ethereal
    (Maslows concepts)
  • Rolls Royces not part of utility set of poor
  • Baked beans not part of utility set of rich
  • Habit
  • Buy mainly what you bought yesterday
  • Change in consumption
  • Evolutionary rather than rational process

8
Utility maximising individuals?
  • Individual tastes no longer a given but vital
    economic issue
  • Explains individual partitioning of commodity
    space
  • Selling new products requires movement of this
    space
  • Marketing, advertising thus essential economic
    activities if new products are to be sold
  • Co-evolution of products and tastes an essential
    aspect of economic development

9
Would it have
  • Profit maximising firms selling homogeneous
    products, with output constrained by rising
    marginal cost and falling marginal revenue?
  • No way!
  • Production engineers know factories have
  • enormous fixed costs
  • constant/falling variable costs (below capacity)
  • Marketing executives just want to sell as much as
    possible (forget stopping sales where MCgtMR!)
  • Management executives know firms need investment
    in new product development to survive
  • Marginal costs cant possibly equal marginal
    revenue (let alone price)

10
Profit maximising firms?
  • We already know this from numerous surveys of
    plant managers/production engineers throughout
    20th century (Hall Hitch 1939, Eiteman 1947,
    1948, Bishop 1948, Haines 1948, Eiteman Guthrie
    1952, Means 1972, Lee 1996, 1998, Blinder et al
    1998)
  • Over 89 per cent of respondents indicated that
    marginal costs either declined or stayed
    constant with changes in output (sometimes
    involving discrete jumps). Finally, only four of
    200 enterprises had both elastic demand curves
    and increasing marginal costs. (Downward Lee
    2001, reviewing Blinder)
  • Fixed costs appear to be more important in the
    real world than in economic theory. (Blinder)

11
Profit maximising firms?
  • Economists have ignored this empirical datum on
    the basis of their theoretical a prioris re
    profit maximisation
  • Firms must be profit maximisers, otherwise they
    would not survive
  • Marginal cost must rise, otherwise competitive
    firms would produce infinite output
  • Firms conscious behaviour like that of billiard
    players (Friedman 1953)
  • dont consciously calculate Newtonian formulae
    for ball impact/energy transfer/particle
    trajectory
  • but unless unconscious behaviour has same
    outcome, wont be expert billiard players

12
Profit maximising firms?
  • Excellent predictions would be yielded by the
    hypothesis that the billiard player made his
    shots as if he knew the complicated mathematical
    formulas , could make lightning calculations
    from the formulas, and could then make the balls
    travel in the direction indicated by the
    formulas. Our confidence in this hypothesis is
    not based on the belief that billiard players,
    even expert ones, can or do go through the
    process described it derives rather from the
    belief that, unless in some way or other they
    were capable of reaching essentially the same
    result, they would not in fact be expert billiard
    players.
  • Yes, but could economists formulas guide firms
    like Newtons could guide billiard players? No
    way!

13
Profit maximising firms?
  • Neoclassical profit maximising formulas derived
    by
  • holding time constant
  • partitioning time into market/short period/long
    period
  • analysing profit maximisation as ordinary
    differential problem
  • Solving first order optimisation problem
  • If mathematicians tried to help out, modern
    mathematicians would express profit as a multiple
    differential function
  • Profit as a function of quantity, time, area,

14
Profit maximising firms?
  • Neoclassical logic
  • Profit a function of quantity
  • Price decreasing and cost increasing functions of
    quantity
  • Maximise profit by setting marginal revenue equal
    to marginal cost
  • Mathematical logic
  • Profit at least a function of quantity and time
  • quantity also a function of time
  • Dynamic goal maximisation of rate of growth of
    profit

15
Profit maximising firms?
  • Rate of growth of profit is
  • This is MR-MC
  • Substituting
  • Under what circumstances will setting MRMC
    maximise the rate of growth of profit?
  • Is this condition relevant to a dynamic economy?
  • No, it is the definition of a static one

No way!
  • Are the values of MR and MC relevant to the
    conditions for maximising the rate of growth of
    the rate of profit?

16
Profit maximising firms?
  • Even assuming that the rate of growth of the rate
    of profit is monotonic, the rate of change of the
    rate of growth of profit is zero where (courtesy
    of Mathematica)
  • Would any mathematician in her right mind advise
    a firm to manage this function?

17
Profit maximising firms?
  • Mathematicians guidance?
  • Maximisation problem far too complex (a.k.a.
    travelling salesman)
  • No simple maximisation routine available
  • Several functions needed clearly cant be known
    (dq/dt, dP/dt)
  • Experimental search algorithms only way to
    explore such a complex space
  • Suck it and see
  • Genetic algorithms, neural networks
  • Other fatal logical errors in neoclassical theory
    (Keen, Legge Fishburn 2001)

18
Would it have?
  • Collective as simple sum of individual
    behaviours?
  • No way!
  • Emergent behaviour concept still developing,
    but common across sciences
  • reductionism losing sway compared to organicism
  • Awareness than biology cannot be reduced to
    chemistry, chemistry to physics (or effort
    involved in so doing far exceeds benefits)
  • Awareness that properties of collective cannot be
    reduced to summed properties of constituents
  • Nonlinear relations between constituents as/more
    important than properties of individual
    constituents

19
Whole as simple sum of parts?
  • Advanced economics has proven this too
  • Sonnenshein-Mantel-Debreu conditions for utility
    aggregation
  • Bhaduri conditions for income distribution
  • Euler conditions for supply aggregation
  • Kirman 1989 if one maintains the fundamentally
    individualistic approach to constructing economic
    models no amount of attention to the walls will
    prevent the citadel from being empty. Empty in
    the sense that one cannot expect it to house the
    elements of a scientific theory, one capable of
    producing empirically falsifiable propositions.

20
Would it have?
  • Ceteris paribus in initiation, General
    Equilibrium in the high temple?
  • No way!
  • Economic methodology made analytic choices to
  • ignore feedback effects
  • ignore disequilibrium processes
  • when intellectual technology made such choices
    advisable (though still far from optimal)
  • 19th century statics (linear algebra)
    mathematics more advanced/accessible than
    dynamics (differential equations)
  • Computors used pencils and wore dresses

21
Equilibrium methodology?
  • Jevons 1871 If we wished to have a complete
    solution ... we should have to treat it as a
    problem of dynamics. But it would surely be
    absurd to attempt the more difficult question
    when the more easy one is yet so imperfectly
    within our power.
  • Marshall 1907 ...dynamics includes statics...
    But the statical solution is simpler... it may
    afford useful preparation and training for the
    more difficult dynamical solution and it may be
    the first step towards a provisional and partial
    solution in problems so complex that a complete
    dynamical solution is beyond our attainment.

But today?...
22
Equilibrium methodology?
  • Modern mathematics
  • knows static and dynamic answers to problems
    differ
  • Static real part of dominant eigenvalue lt 0
  • Dynamic real part of dominant eigenvalue gt 0
  • understands nonlinear (dynamic) as well as
    linear (static) methods
  • has sophisticated means to analyse nonlinear
    dynamical systems
  • Chaos, complexity the modern fads, vs
    linear algebra of Walras day (which was already
    antique then)

23
Equilibrium methodology?
  • Modern engineering
  • No longer mechanics but systems dynamics
  • Any serious modern engineering task a complex
    dynamic far from equilibrium project
  • Feedback effects and management of far from
    equilibrium processes the go today
  • Modern digital computers
  • Massive computation/simulation/modelling feasible
  • Patently dynamic processes (e.g., weather)
    modelled using patently dynamic tools
  • Some examples

Vissim
24
Would it have?
  • No role for evolution?
  • No way!
  • Evolutionary logic now permeates not just biology
    (Marshalls Mecca of the economist), but
    virtually all sciences
  • Evolutionary theories of universe formation,
  • Evolutionary methodologies in comparative
    infancy, but evolving with growth in computing
    power, development of GA/GP search algorithms,
    etc.
  • Game theory a pale imitation of this work
  • Veblens Why is economics not an evolutionary
    science? even more poignant than at turn of 20th
    century.

25
A new economics would
  • Be evolutionary and dynamic in character, not
    mechanical and static
  • Treat individual behaviour as exploratory/satisfic
    ing, not optimising
  • Treat collective behaviour as emergent, not
    necessarily consistent with individual behaviour
  • Embrace rather than avoid feedback effects

26
Who are the real antiquarians?
  • Modern economics preserves
  • antiquated
  • invalidated
  • irrelevant
  • approaches to analysing economic issues
  • Neoclassical economists (and, strangely enough,
    most Marxists) are the real antiquarians

Bring on the meteors!
27
(No Transcript)
28
  • In other disciplines, history of
    thoughtsubservient to modern theorywhere did
    our modern ideas come from?Antiquarianinterest
    in past for its own sakeIn economics, HET
    oftenHighly critical of modern theoryLooking
    for the lost way
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