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Crisis, Economics, and the Emperor's Clothes
Crisis, Economics, and the Emperor's Clothes
Crisis, Economics, and the Emperor's Clothes
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Crisis, Economics, and the Emperor's Clothes

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Why isn’t society doing better economically, socially and environmentally? Why haven the advances of science and technology not led to more wealth, well-being and a brighter outlook for humanity? This book argues the blame lies for an important part in the theory and practice of economics. Standard economics is based on poorly conceived premises and method, resulting in misguided policy prescriptions. These helped cause the 2007 crisis, inhibit economic recovery, foster future crises, and restrain society in addressing its social and environmental problems.
The book shows that what is considered responsible economic, financial and fiscal policy puts society in an economic straightjacket that prevents the full development of its productive potential. It presents the outline of a new economics, a social science that can help generate the productive potential to create a dynamic, socially equitable and environmentally sustainable society.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherLulu.com
Release dateJun 4, 2013
ISBN9781304089878
Crisis, Economics, and the Emperor's Clothes

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    Crisis, Economics, and the Emperor's Clothes - Frans Doorman

    Crisis, Economics, and the Emperor's Clothes

    CRISIS, ECONOMICS, AND THE EMPEROR’S CLOTHES

    Why economics fails to deal with society’s economic, social and environmental problems, and what to do about it

    By Frans Doorman

    © 2012 Frans Doorman

    ISBN: 978-1-304-08987-8

    This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

    Key words: economics, new economics, social science, sustainable development

    Published through Lulu internet publishers: www.lulu.com

    An abridged version of this book is available: The Common Sense Manifesto, also published through Lulu. For further information, visit www.new-economics.info.

    QUOTES

    "Markets and profits are crucial to increase economic welfare, but the pure free market model is deeply flawed. Criticisms of the relevance of the equilibrium model to the real world have been made for many years. Indeed, there appear to be so many violations of the conditions under which competitive equilibrium exists that is it hard to see why the concept survives, except for the vested interests of the economics profession and the link between prevailing right wing political ideology and the justifications equilibrium theory provides.

    The orthodoxy of economics, trapped in an idealized, mechanistic view of the world, is powerless to assist in resolving the world’s economic problems and crises."

    Paul Ormerod, The Death of Economics, 1994

    Reputable or, as it is often called, mainstream economics has for some centuries given grace and acceptability to convenient belief – to what the socially and economically favored most wish or need to have believed. This economics, to repeat, is wholly reputable; it permeates and even dominates professional discussion and writing, the textbooks and classroom instruction.

    John Kenneth Galbraith, The Culture of Contentment, 1992

    All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as self-evident.

    Arthur Schopenhauer

    PREFACE

    This book is a pamphlet: a call to action. Its origin is frustration, reflected in a simple question: Why aren’t we doing better? More elaborately: Why, in spite of enormous advances in science and technology, do society’s economic, social, and environmental problems appear to get worse rather than better? Why haven’t those advances led to more wealth, wellbeing and a brighter outlook for humanity?

    These questions apply in different measure to different types of problems and groups of people. Let’s focus. One: why do close to half the world’s citizens, more than three billion people, continue to live in poverty, among them half the world’s 2.2 billion children? Two: why, in the rich countries, are most lower and middle income earners and their families worse off financially than they were in the 1970s? And why, in the wake of the economic and financial crisis that started in 2007, are things getting worse rather than better, with millions of people having lost or loosing their jobs, homes, or both, and with tens of millions of young people unable to find employment?

    Three: why does society appear unable to deal effectively with global environmental problems that threaten present and especially future generations, such as global warming, fresh water shortages, and the loss of agricultural land and natural ecosystems? Why, in the aftermath of the 2007 financial crisis, does meeting these challenges appear more remote than ever?

    Four: why, in spite of continuing progress in science and technology, do pundits tell governments and citizens that for the time being they can pretty well forget about addressing the above issues, because they have to tighten their belts? Why is economic insecurity increasing, and why do many experts claim new financial, economic and fiscal crises are as good as inevitable?

    Logically one would expect that our increasing technological prowess would have translated into an equivalent, steady increase in well-being for all or at least an overwhelming majority of humanity. That this hasn’t happened, and in the current constellation appears unlikely to occur any time soon is a question that should be at the top of our agendas. One would likewise expect that technological innovation would give us an ever increasing capacity to address the environmental challenges we’re facing, at national as well as global level. The technology is there, yet we do not seem to be able to apply it effectively, on the required scale. In consequence problems are increasing rather then diminishing. Again, we should ask ourselves: How is this possible?

    Of course, we have made progress over the past fifty years. There is more material wealth: the better-off in this world have more, safer and cleaner cars, and lots of electronic appliances and gadgets. Middle and upper class households live in bigger, more luxurious houses. When we’re ill doctors are able to work miracles. And, as those who claim humanity has progressed economically will be quick to point out, even poor people have cell phones these days. Life expectancy has risen and child mortality decreased, also in poor countries. In the rich countries, many forms of pollution are under control, with the environment in much better shape than it was fifty years ago.

    Yet in spite of such progress, in the rich countries the lower and middle income groups that make up about 70 to 80 percent of the population in the rich nations are not much better off than they were in the 1950s and 1960s. Their incomes have stagnated; they have to work harder and longer to make ends meet, and face greater economic insecurity. Health care and education have gotten more expensive[1], social security has been dressed down. Though thanks to technological progress appliances have gone down in price, mom and dad now need to work more hours than in the past to maintain their standard of living and educate their kids. Most households cannot survive any longer on a single income, as they could in the first decades after the Second World War. These days for many low and middle income families even joint wages are not enough to pay the bills – one of the reasons people got so deeply indebted over the past twenty years.

    And that’s only in the rich countries. In the poor countries, where the bulk of humanity lives, two-thirds of humankind still lives in poverty, on less than $2 a day. Though tens of millions have joined the middle class, mostly in Asia, new jobs with adequate wages benefit only relatively minor sections of the population: perhaps a few hundred million out of four billion, less than ten percent. In the aftermath of the 2007 financial crisis, these numbers are unlikely to grow much. In fact, in both poor and rich countries the number of poor is increasing again – according to the World Bank, by the tens of millions.

    So again, let’s ask ourselves: how is this possible? How is it possible that in spite of enormous and ongoing technological advances most people are barely doing better, and many are doing worse than forty years ago? How come most of humanity has benefited only partly or not at all from this progress? How come our environmental outlook is getting worse rather than better, even though technological solutions to our problems exist?

    The answer, so I will argue in this book, lies for an important part in the flawed precepts and faulty practice of economics. More specifically, it lies in the paradigm at the core of standard economics, the model of competitive equilibrium. As critical economists and others have already argued convincingly before me, many of the precepts underlying this model as well as the economic dogmas flowing from it are gross simplifications and worse, distortions of reality. Jointly with deficient methodology these shortcomings lead to a failure, unparalleled in any other science, to correctly analyze and predict the phenomena that are the subject matter of economics. And worse, the faults of economics lead to economic policy prescriptions that, through their enormous influence in society, enhance the problems we’re facing or at best, hinder their solution.

    Critiques of economics are not new: the failures of economics have been recognized well before the 2007 crisis. What should worry all of us is that in spite of these critiques nothing changes. Not even the 2007 crisis has led to the honest recognition that something is fundamentally amiss in economics. There has been no initiative for an in-depth, discipline-wide review of economic theory and practice, including a thorough analysis of the failure to adequately explain economic reality and come up with adequate policy prescriptions.

    The economics profession, then, has made no concrete steps towards improving its performance. Nonetheless it continues to wield major influence over economic policy, chanting the same tired old mantras as before the crisis: reduce government, let markets do their work, liberalize trade, lower taxes, give free reign to private initiative. Economic orthodoxy, based on an almost unconditional faith in private initiative and markets, continues to reign supreme. The mantras are repeated not only by mainstream economists but also by politicians, bureaucrats and the media[2]. They are par for the course for all established quality news magazines and newspapers, including more left-leaning ones of which one might expect a more critical attitude.

    In spite of economics’ poor record economists and the science they proclaim to practice are not challenged – not at a fundamental level. Yes, economists are mocked because in spite of a shared belief in the basic tenets of their science, they often disagree on just about everything else. And they are ridiculed because their predictions are so often beside the mark. Yet the mantras of economics continue to be accepted as universal truths, and the core model of macro-economics, the competitive equilibrium model, continues to reign supreme. Economists are not forced to explain why they’re wrong so often. And they rarely engage in the kind of in-depth assessment of their profession that could lead to an explanation.

    One reason for economists not being challenged may be the high level of specialization in our society, in science as well as in other fields. Today even the most brilliant minds are reluctant to cross disciplinary boundaries into fields other than their own. A second reason may be the self-confidence displayed by many economists in hammering home what they consider to be self-evident truths. Such self-assuredness is an effective tool for keeping potential non-economist critics at bay.

    Economics, however, is too important to be left to economists. First, because its influence on policy making and thereby, on our daily lives is way too important to ignore. Second, because if over the past century economists have proven one thing convincingly, it is that they are unable to address the flaws in their profession themselves. Third, and most important, because we cannot effectively address current and future economic, social and environmental problems if we cling to economic dogma.

    A little background on who’s writing this book is in order. I am a sociologist (PhD) by training, specialized in the sociology of developing countries. I have worked for 30 years in development cooperation, for various consultancy firms, institutes of higher education, the Dutch government, the World Bank, the European Commission, and different U.N. organizations. Applied economics has always been an important factor in my studies and work, and I have followed the discussions on key economic issues in the media since university.

    For many people, especially economists, the fact that this book is not written by an economist may be a reason to put it aside right now: where does someone who is not a practitioner find the gall to argue for an entire science to be rebuilt? My first answer to that question is that as a sociologist I can claim a measure of authority in the field. After all economics is social science: it deals with a particular aspect of human behavior, economic decision making. Social scientists, notably sociologists and psychologists, have developed theory, methods and tools that are highly relevant for economics. Unfortunately, as we’ll see further on, only a minority of economists makes use of these assets. I would also argue, and will do so in detail further on, that because sociology and psychology have developed more adequate methodology for studying human decision making than economics, non-economic social scientists may well be in a better position to level a fundamental critique at economics than economists themselves.

    My second answer to the question of where a non-economist finds the nerve to challenge economics is that the problems of economics are so severe and fundamental that it may require outsiders to address them. One might even say that it would be almost unfair to expect economists to see the faults in the economic edifice. See, if you will, economics as a building of which the foundations are flawed. Economists, being inside the building, cannot see the cracks: one has to be outside and dig to notice them. Moreover for economists, who should be seen as the architects, engineers and workers who have helped construct the building, it is a huge psychological challenge to admit there is something amiss with the foundations – and that consequently, the building has to be reconstructed from the ground up.

    For whom, why, and where to

    This book is written for a broad audience: the reasonably informed lay person with an interest in current affairs as well as economists, natural scientists, and social scientists. Above all it is aimed at people concerned with the economic, ecological, and social problems society faces, and an interest in solving those problems. The book is meant not only to give people a new perspective on key issues that affect us all. It is also a call to action: to question economists on the validity of their own science. To do so is a necessary first step towards a new economics, with the aim not only to better explain economic phenomena but even more so, to provide us with better tools to address the multitude of problems humanity faces in the 21st century. More particularly, the challenge should lead to the removal of barriers, in the form of misguided economic policies that now restrain us in effectively addressing those problems.

    To challenge economists on their own terrain is, of course, an uphill battle. The natural tendency for all people, including scientists, is to defend one’s convictions against external critique. The most effective way to do so is to question not the message but the messenger. As challengers we’ll have to take care not to be lured into that trap, and insist on being judged on the basis of arguments, not on whom or what we are.

    It would be especially important for natural scientists to enter the debate on revamping economics. First, because most economists pretend economics to be hard science, on a par with natural science – as opposed to social science, which is considered soft. This pretense of being hard science is misguided: economics is about human behavior and therefore, by definition a social science.

    A second reason for natural scientists to get involved is because they should start taking issue with economics being one of the reasons that the fruits of their work are underutilized. If it weren’t for economics society could, over the past five decades, have made much better use of the new insights and technology the natural sciences have produced, leading to much greater progress in creating a productive, ecologically sustainable, and socially inclusive economy.

    A third reason for natural scientists to enter the debate is money. The work of natural and other scientists, especially those in the public sector, is often hampered by the lack of it. Economics is to blame at least in part. Especially orthodox economists are calling for cuts in taxes and public spending, leaving less money for scientific research not bound to the interests of corporations. They are a determining force in privatizing science, leading to funding being aimed at increasing sales and marketing rather than the growth of knowledge. And the orthodox are justifying multi-million dollar salaries and bonuses for managers and financial deal makers while scientists and technologists, earning relatively meager salaries, have to scrape together funds to pay for science for the common good.

    Time, then, for both natural and social scientists to take up their intellectual arms. Whether scientist or lay person, if swayed by the arguments in this book your help will be needed to topple the pedestal upon which economists have put themselves. The debate on the validity of standard economic theory and practice will have to be opened. The issues raised in this book can serve as a fist step for critically assessing economics’ premises, theory and policy prescriptions, as a preface to rebuilding the economic edifice. The intended outcome is a new, methodologically sound economics, founded in the systematic analysis of reality, with new and better paradigms and methods. And most important, a new applied science able to provide insights, tools and policy recommendations for the benefit of humanity.

    Terminology

    In this book I’ll frequently use the terms standard, mainstream, and orthodox economics. With standard economics I refer to the generally accepted set of theories and methodology of economics as taught in economic textbooks and courses. It is to a significant extent equivalent to mainstream economics, the term used in what’s probably the best known economics textbook, Economics, by Nobel Price laureate Paul A. Samuelson and William D. Nordhaus[3]. Samuelson and Nordhaus describe mainstream economics as "the modern mainstream economics that prevails in the mixed capitalist economies North America, Western Europe and Japan."  Though standard and mainstream economics use the same, sometimes partially conflicting theories, the underlying concepts and model, notably the concept of Rational Economic Man (or Homo economicus: an individual striving always and everywhere for maximum profit) and the model of competitive equilibrium, which assumes that markets always tend towards an optimum in which efficiency is maximized, are shared. Even though some economists recognize the shortcomings of both concept and model the consensus in standard economics is that these shortcomings are acceptable, and that therefore, the use of both concept and model in developing economic theory and policy is justified. The debates raging in economics are not on the concept and model themselves but on translating them into economic policy.

    There is consensus, then, on the concepts of competitive equilibrium and Rational Economic Man as the basis for economic theory and practice. However, by using the term mainstream economics Samuelson and Nordhaus suggest a consensus that isn’t there. The main difference lies in the perception of markets and the role of government. Here the distinction between orthodox and liberal or Keynesian economics becomes useful. Orthodox economists, aligned with political conservatism and the political Right, believe in the self-healing capacity of markets and therefore, of laissez faire: freedom from (state) interference. Liberal or Keynesian economists, more aligned with the political Left, believe markets sometimes work imperfectly and therefore, require a measure of government intervention to remedy distortions and shortcomings. Note that here and throughout this book the term liberal is used in the U.S. meaning of politically progressive, meaning in favor of government intervention in areas where unfettered economic forces are expected to lead to socially, environmentally and economically undesirable outcomes.

    For the purposes of this book the similarities between the different economic orientations are more important than their differences. Parting from the model of competitive equilibrium and the underlying concept of Rational Economic Man both groups base their policy recommendations on the idea that an ideal economic situation can be achieved in which resources are allocated optimally and efficiency is maximized. The difference lies in the orthodox believing this state of economic Nirvana can best be achieved by letting market forces have their way, whereas liberals believe that occasional government interference is needed to achieve or approach it. Moreover, liberals consider that the strive for maximum efficiency may lead to socially or environmentally undesirable outcomes.

    Acknowledgements

    This book makes ample use of the work of critical economists. My main source is Paul Ormerod, who has credentials in the academy as well as the private sector. In his book The Death of Economics[4] Ormerod effectively deals with the failures of standard economics, in particular the model of competitive equilibrium, with an insider's knowledge and an outsider's analytical look. To a lesser extent I also make use of Deirdre N. McCloskey’s book The Vices of Economists – The virtues of the Bourgeoisie[5], in which she convincingly shows that much of economics is poor, even dismal science due to the misguided application of mathematics and statistics. As academic and professional insider-economists these authors offer a much more authoritative critique than I can present. Therefore I’ve used Ormerod’s and McCloskey’s work, together with that of the better known, but among economists somewhat disdained political economist John Kenneth Galbraith, to substantiate the critique of economics that lies at the heart of this book. However, though agreeing on the problem I radically differ from Ormerod and McCloskey in terms of solutions: of what a new economics should look like. And I’m likely to differ even more radically in my viewpoints on how this new economics should be used to resolve society’s problems.

    The following persons commented on an early draft of the book and by doing so, helped me greatly in strengthening its focus and eliminating less essential and repetitive sections: Toon van Eijk, Quirin Laumans, Dirk Bol, Ton de Klerk, Luc de Ruijter, Martin Zwanenburg, Maarten Schröder, Theo Baken, and Heko Köster. Bernhard Schmidt commented on a later version, and gave valid suggestions for making the argument more inclusive. Jennifer Peters and Robin Doheny revised my (American) English, making important corrections and improvements. Thanks to them all. My appreciation also goes to Wikipedia, of which I made ample use to write this book, and to Paul Ormerod who unwittingly, through his book The Death of Economics, was both an inspiration and provided me with ammunition for my critique of economics.  Finally, I thank my wife Cristina for her patience with me, especially when for the umpteenth time I would cop out of an outing or a weekend away from home with the excuse I have to work on my book!


    [1] For instance, from 1965 to 2012 the average cost (adjusted for inflation) of tuition, room and board at a four year university in the U.S. increased 20-fold, from $ 1051 to $ 22.450 (Newsweek, March 26 & April 2, 2012).

    [2] Though the financial and economic crisis that erupted in 2007 has somewhat diminished the influence of orthodox economics, the listed commandments continue to be defended by a large majority of economists, with deviations seen at best as a temporary need in times of crisis.

    [3] Paul A. Samuelson and William D. Nordhaus, Economics, McGraw-Hill International Editions. The 18th edition was published in 2004. The book has been translated into forty-one languages and in total has sold over four million copies (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economics_%28textbook%29). Nordhaus co-wrote from the 12th edition on, which appeared in 1985, and has been responsible for the latest editions.

    [4] Faber and Faber, London-Boston, 1994

    [5] Amsterdam University Press, 1996

    SUMMARY: FOURTEEN PROPOSITIONS

    The contents of this book can be summarized in the following fourteen propositions:

    1) Standard economics is a misguided attempt to capture reality in mathematical models. Standard economic theory and policy prescriptions, derived from the model of competitive equilibrium, are based on simplifications and assumptions so far removed from reality that their use leads to a distorted view of economic reality.

    2) Standard economics, rather than testing its models and assumptions against reality, treats them as universal truths. Economics’ failure to discard the model, in spite of overwhelming evidence it does not work, makes economics resemble faith more than science.

    3) Standards economics’ reliance on the equilibrium model has led to two major maladies: market fetishism and equilibrium faith. Market fetishism leads to the idolization of markets, which are seen as the only creators of wealth and the only way to solve society’s problems in an efficient manner. Equilibrium faith holds that markets naturally tend to an ideal state in which resources are allocated optimally. Neither assumption is grounded in reality, but both are decisive in formulating economic and financial policy.

    4) The failure to critically assess the model of competitive equilibrium has led to blanket policy prescriptions evolving into dogma instead of science-based advice. Economic dogma contributed to the 2007 crisis and inhibits recovery, leads to growing imbalances in the economy, lays the basis for future crises, and restrains society in addressing its social and environmental problems.

    5) The economy is no more than the aggregate outcome of human decision making on economic matters. The assumption that there is an economic reality beyond this decision making, with its own dynamics and universal laws, is faith. The attempt to turn economics into a hard, natural science by trying to express these imaginary laws in mathematical equations is misguided.

    6) Economics should use social science methodology for studying the essence and outcomes of economic decision making. Blackboard economics should be replaced by an approach based on empirical methods, such as observation, interviewing and experimentation, and inductive reasoning.

    7) Equilibrium thinking has led to economists overlooking crucial developments in the economy. The main development being overlooked is a growing gap between economic demand (demand backed up by the capacity to pay) and the productive capacity of society. The latter increases rapidly through technological development, whereas demand falls behind due to stagnating lower and middle incomes and the drive to reduce government expenditure.

    8) Over the past decades the growing gap between productive capacity and demand has been obscured by the supply and use of credit, with inflated asset values compensating for stagnating incomes. The 2007 crisis has put an end to this, leaving the perspective of a prolonged and self-reinforcing downturn.

    9) Another phenomenon overlooked by economics is the existence of a financial or, a better term, speculative economy. This economy can be seen as operating parallel to,  yet interacting with, the real economy in which the production and consumption of goods and services takes place. The money in this financial economy is used for large scale speculation. This increases wealth in the short run but then leads, unavoidably, to financial crises as in 2007.

    10) Today’s economics offers no solutions to the growing gap between demand and productive capacity and therefore, no way out of society’s economic predicament. On the contrary, the mainstream economic prescriptions of unfettered free trade, cutting taxes, freeing labor markets and downsizing government further widen the gap between productivity and economic demand. Moreover, these policy prescriptions result in more money being channelled into the speculative economy, contributing to further crises.

    11) Standard economics’ focus on maximizing efficiency in resource allocation to meet economic demand, making it oblivious to key societal issues such as poverty and environmental deterioration. A new applied economics should focus on providing knowledge and tools for achieving the greatest well-being for the greatest number of people and ensuring that the basic needs of all people, now and in the future, are met.

    12) Equilibrium thinking and market fetishism impose an artificial shortage of money on the real economy of the production of goods and services. Money creation for use by the state is the only course of action to resolve the problem of the growing gap between productive capacity and demand. Thus it is the only way to get the economy out of the post-2007 downturn. It is also essential for developing society’s productive capacity to meet both economic demand and societal needs, such as the conversion to a green economy and poverty alleviation.

    13) Money creation for use by governments will not cause inflation if confidence in the value of money can be maintained and total demand does not exceed production capacity. Both conditions can be met if, as today, money creation is delegated to independent central banks. There is no reason to fear inflation on the basis of the quantity theory of money, as this theory is based on false assumptions and deficient analysis resulting from equilibrium faith.

    14) If economists are incapable of reinventing their profession, non-economists will have to force them to do so. This drive for change should come from a broad front of citizens with the interest of all of humanity at heart. The first step on the path to change is to challenge the validity of current economic theory and practice. The second is to open the debate on money creation for use by the state, so as to allow society to fully develop its productive capacity and address its economic, social and environmental problems.

    1          THE FLAWS OF ECONOMICS

    1.1        The emperor’s clothes: an analogy

    One of the most well known stories by the Danish fairy tale writer Hans Christian Andersen is The Emperor’s New Clothes. The story is about a vain king who is enticed by two swindlers to pay handsomely for a set of robes made of specially woven cloth. The cloth displays the most beautiful colors and patterns and has the added advantage of being invisible to everyone not fit for his post. Of course neither cloth nor robes exist, but since no one is willing to admit they can’t see the robes everyone, including the king himself, falls for the charade. The king’s ministers and other underlings fall over each other in complementing the king on his new outfit. When the king wears the non-existing outfit in a parade the townspeople likewise cheer its beauty. Only an innocent child dares call out the truth: that the king doesn’t wear any clothes. The story ends with the child’s outcry being ignored and the king continuing his procession – with his courtiers pretending to carry the train of the robe that isn’t there.

    There is a great similarity between this story and the way people deal with economics and its practitioners: economists. The core of the analogy is in the king pretending his clothes are real and beautiful and economists pretending their findings are scientific and therefore, an adequate tool for policy making. Another analogy consists in the king’s ministers and courtiers being unwilling to challenge the king. The counterpart to this is non-economists – politicians, pundits and other opinion makers, especially the mainstream press – faithfully parroting what economists present as universal truths, with the general public, including non-economic scientists, as passive bystanders. And the child? In the world of economics it’s not been found yet, unfortunately. Which is why I’ll attempt to take that role.

    There are, as in most analogies, also differences. The most striking one may be that in Andersen’s story everybody knows or suspects the truth – that there are no clothes. But people are unwilling to admit it – afraid of going out on a limb, of being the odd person out and especially of damaging their interests. Only the child, with no interests at stake and more important, not yet bothered by social conventions, is unrestrained and calls things as they are. In contrast in our society economists themselves, pundits, politicians, other opinion leaders and the public at large all appear to genuinely believe in economics and its practitioners. In other words, unlike the two swindlers, everyone actually appears to believe the cloth being woven is real and a wonder to behold. There is a reason for that belief – another difference with Andersen’s story. Economics is not, as in the story, nothing; it is a huge and intricate body of knowledge. The delusion is caused because, as will be shown later on, the foundations, the basic tenets of that body of knowledge are wrong. The analogy with a building was already given: economics should be seen as a huge edifice, with an elegantly designed superstructure but fatally flawed foundations. In consequence the whole building is unfit for use. Living in the building puts us at risk: it may collapse on top of us. So it is in the economy: the faulty principles used in the design of economic policy lead to structural imbalances and a poorly functioning economy at risk of collapse – as almost happened in 2008. In some cases economic policy works, in others it worsens society’s problems or hinders us in effectively tackling them.

    The foundations of a building are not easily accessible. Therefore the basic flaws of economics are not as easy to observe as the fact that the emperor is wearing nothing. This difference makes the unmasking of economics a lot tougher than that of the swindlers in the story. Moreover, whereas in Andersen’s story the spell was created by two swindlers who did not believe their own story, in economics an entire body of highly qualified and intelligent professionals who fervently believe in their own science have to be confronted.

    Andersen, with apparent insight into how society works, lets the swindlers get away with their fraud – even though for all it is plain to see what’s going on. The child is silenced. Perhaps, as a sociologist, I should realize this is the way the world works. Nonetheless I hope to have more success than the child, and convince people that I am at least partly right. The hope is to inspire other, more capable critics than me to start addressing the faults in economics and reduce the constraints those faults impose upon us, through real improvements in economic analysis and policy making.

    1.2        Economists and society

    Economists have an enormous influence on society. Policies of governments, central banks and private banks are based on economic theory. Economic advisors and pundits from national and international financial institutions, such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) tell governments what to do on an almost daily basis. Their admonitions and advice are widely documented in the press, and directly or indirectly influence policy makers around the world.

    The influence of economics is not limited to economic and financial policy. Because everything governments do has a cost all policy-making is tied to the availability of money. If there is no money for a specific policy, meaning that policy makers decide the available money should be spent on other things, the policy involved will not be implemented.

    Economists calculate not only the financial costs and benefits of government spending but even more so, claim as their working terrain the economic impact of government interventions. Take social policy. Policy makers may decide to reduce social security because economic theory holds that this will reduce unemployment levels and foster economic growth. Another example is environmental policy. According to economic theory, countering pollution by creating a market in which permits to pollute are traded by companies is the most efficient way to address the problem, meaning it will give the best possible results for the resources spent. Thus economics affects the daily lives of all of us, also in areas most people would not directly describe as economic.

    Economists frequently complain that politicians do not follow their advice. Yet the basic concepts of orthodox and mainstream economics are almost universally accepted as principles of sound economic and financial management: by economists themselves and by business people, politicians and the mainstream media. The most widely read and highly esteemed news magazine of the global economic and political elite is called "The Economist. This newspaper", as it calls itself, though well-known for its sharp analysis of current affairs, stays strictly within the confines of economic convention. All countries, even those run by odd and isolated regimes such as North Korea and Myanmar (the former Burma), apply at least some of the basics of what is considered acceptable financial and economic policy. That gives economics, and economists, an enormous responsibility. Are they up to it?

    Economists themselves appear to think so. Using economic theory they advocate policies that will benefit the economy and therefore, so the implicit argument goes, society. When those policies fail to deliver the expected results it is rarely the advice that’s wrong. Rather, the blame is put at the feet of those implementing the policies, who implemented the prescriptions wrongly or insufficiently. Or blame is put on external factors: people did not behave as they should have. And what of the reaction of non-economists when economic predictions don’t hold or economic policy does not lead to the expected results? It is not, as one might expect, rejection. We swallow it all, and ask for more. As I write this, a few years after the start of the 2007 crisis, we look to economists to get us out of the mess for which, so most would agree, they bear at least partial responsibility.

    Economists often disagree with each other. Lampoons abound: put 100 economists together in a room and you’ll have 101 opinions. Or: lay all economists head-to-toe in a single line and you still don’t reach a solution. Moreover, most economists appear to be wrong most of the time. Estimates of key indicators such as economic growth are adapted constantly, and major events are not foreseen, with as a shining example the financial crisis and economic downturn that started in 2007. Only a few economists, operating mostly outside the economic mainstream, predicted that the preceding economic boom was unsustainable; even fewer predicted the crisis. Whereas as we’ll see further on, in hindsight, when the events leading up to the crisis were brought to light, it appears plain that things were bound to go wrong. Take the efforts of banks and financial agents to entice people to take on excessive mortgage

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