Monday, March 18, 2013

THE “DEPOLITIZATION” OF THE ECONOMICS (Part 3)


The triumphant neoliberalism

On November 9, 1989 a historic event of great importance did happen in the world: the fall of the Berlin Wall. That same year Francis Fukuyama published his famous article “The End of History” in which he argues that “we are witnessing the end of history as such: that is, the end point of mankind's ideological evolution and the universalization of Western liberal democracy as the final form of government” (15). Thus, neoliberalism trumps all other alternatives civilizational and consecrated itself as the final form of political-economic organization of the “New World Order”.

In this context of globalization, the economic theory becomes a mere instrumental knowledge (technocracy) thinking itself essentially as a “tool-box”, constituted by models and theories to be conveniently used by economist to fix up the “mismatches” of economical machinery. No longer examines content issues of economics. Only the functional relationships are considered important. In other words, it does not matter to know what is X and what is Y but only how they relate functionally to manipulate variables “instrument” and thus achieve the desired results with the “target variables”. Hence the preponderance has Econometrics in the analysis and current economic policy.

This new approach of the economics as a knowledge essentially instrumental has clear epistemological implications because  not given importance to the explanatory power of theories -which necessarily lead us to the plane of Political Economy- but only to their predictive power. Therefore, it is not strange that a liberal economist as Milton Friedman hold that it is not necessary to consider the realism of the assumptions or the explanatory power of a theory when examining its scientific validity but only its “predictive power” because “positive economics is or may be an objective science in the same sense as any of the physical sciences”. (16)

The “depoliticization” of the Economics

After all this historical analysis of the evolution of economic theory and epistemology in the context of different social and political events, is that we can see clearly that the economists never could get separate science from ideology. The process of “depoliticization” of the economy was clearly an ideological process that sought to eliminate the explicit political element of economic analysis to replace it with an implicit (camouflaged) form of policy based on utilitarian individualism, the doctrine of minimum State and the liberalism bourgeois.

So it is not surprising that economists now called “neoclassical” decided to change the name of economic science from “Political Economy” to simply “Economy”, so that the separation between economics and politics, between market and State, is final. Thus, the Economy become a “pure” science. But that claim is clearly an ideological choice that, as Immanuel Wallerstein explains, “has to do with the dominant ideology during the nineteenth century. Basically, the dominant view of liberalism worldwide was that the State, market and society were three distinct entities. They operated with different logical and therefore should be studied separately, and in a sense, stood apart in the real world. So the scholars had to segregate their knowledge of such aspects. Overall this was what happened, and what was already established in 1945 as an organizing principle for the social sciences at leading universities”. (17)

However, as it explains Oscar Lange “the ideological element in scientific research is not necessarily an obstacle in obtaining results with objective validity” to the point that “the ideological motive can also stimulate the development of science” (18). Therefore, to make an objective judgment about the legitimacy (or illegitimacy) of neoclassical economists's attempt to eliminate the political factor of the Economy will be examined, to speak in terms of epistemology lakatiana, if from this are built scientific research programs “progressives” or “regressives”. (19)

To answer this question it will be necessary to understand the nature of the relationship between economics and politics and then examine the epistemological and practical implications that flow from this.

In general terms we can define economics as the discipline that studies the management of resources to meet human needs and politics as the art of government. However, since resources are limited, there will always be needs that will remain unmet and this will lead to individuals to make decisions about how to distribute and use these resources. This has to do necessarily with the political structure of society in terms of the organization, distribution and institutionalization of the power of the different agents interacting in it, which obviously leads to the plane of politics and, therefore, can be said of consistently that the economy is intrinsically linked to the political and, consequently, that economic theory -if it want to be realistic- must become inescapably in Political Economy.

The epistemological implications of the above line of reasoning are extremely important because it follows that the only coherent and consistent way to study economic phenomena is through of a multidisciplinary analysis because in reality there are no “economic”, “sociological” or “political” problems but only “social problems” and they all have an irreducible complexity, it being understood it as that none of the aspects (political, psychological, ethical, economic, etc.) that compose it can be analyzed in isolation with respect to the other because each one of them have always and necessarily a constant and intrinsic relationship with the others.

The traditional way that neoclassical economists have to get rid of these difficulties has been and still is say that they work only with so-called “economic factors”. But taking into account the above we can say that it is absolutely wrong because it is not logically possible to isolate a part of reality denominating it simply as “economic” when in fact exist as such only insofar as it are interrelated with the legal and the political structure (institutional) of society. Moreover, the appeal to the isolation of the “economic factors” as a criterion of demarcation does not solve anything because it is like a pettitio principi falacy. And is that the single definition of “economic factors” involves scrutiny of all the factors involved, including the “non-economic”, which is only done once defined a priori the concepts used.

With respect to the practical implications of recovering the political approach in Economic theory we have to say they are as or more important than epistemological. As the prestigious epistemologist argentine Mario Bunge says, any study of Economics as if an autonomous and isolated is doomed. Clear example of this is the unfortunate experience they have had and still have several Third World countries with economic planners who ignore the non-economic components of society and the system of values and norms inherent therein. Most development plans designed for these countries are due to economists who have ignored the circumstances and the cultural and political values of those societies, deliberately sacrificing their cultural and political aspirations in order to reach one goal all costs: industrialization, stabilization of the currency or some other purpose of economic policy. No wonder, then, that such plans have usually lacked popular support and, in most cases, have not achieved their goals. A successful development plan should be considered only as a component of a much broader, inclusive and comprehensive social plan.

In conclusion, it is absolutely necessary to recover the political dimension of economics to deal explicitly with greater accuracy, breadth and depth the problems we face. In this sense, the pretension of neoclassical economists to construct an economic theory "chemically pure" is nothing more than an counterproductive ideological attempt which conceals the political nature of the economy in order to avoid the uncomfortable political consequences (for certain group) that could result from economic analysis.

Therefore, the kind of economist who need the world of the future and that should be taught in our universities should be like that Keynes's describing, in his biography of Marshall, when wrote that “has to reach far in different directions and must combine powers natural which is not always found together in the same individual. He must be in some degree mathematician, historian, statesman and philosopher. He must understand symbols and speak with ordinary words. He must contemplate the particular in terms of the general and the abstract and concrete touching on the same flight of thought. He must study the present in the light of the past and facing the future. No part of man's nature or his institutions must be completely out of his consideration. He must be simultaneously intentional and selfless as idealistic and as incorruptible as an artist, yet sometimes as near the earth as a politician”. (20)

References

15. Francis Fukuyama, “The End of History”, The National Interest, No. 16, Summer 1989, p. 4.
16. Milton Friedman, Essays in Positive Economics, Chicago University Press, Chicago, 1953, p.10.
17. Immanuel Wallerstein, "Open the Social Sciences", lecture delivered on 24 October 1995 for the Social Science Research Council in New York.
18. Oscar Lange, “Field and Method of Economics” (1945-1946), in: Economic Quarter, No. 58, Fondo de Cultura Economica, Mexico.
19. See: Imre Lakatos, The methodology of scientific research programs, Alianza, Madrid, 1989, p.9.
20. John M. Keynes, “Essays on Biography”, in: The Collected Writings of John Maynard Keynes, vol. X, Macmillan, London, 1972.


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THE “DEPOLITIZATION” OF THE ECONOMICS (Part 2)


The Keynesian revolution

Throughout the first three decades of the 20th century, the neoclassical paradigm conquered the economic theory “in a way, as full as the Inquisition to Spain” (8). But in 1929 happened an event that directly put in check the neoclassical system: the famous Great Depression of the American economy. It is in that difficult context that appears one of the greatest geniuses of the economy: John Maynard Keynes.

Keynes was a multi-faceted intellectual who achieved fame in mathematics, philosophy, and literature. In his famous book General theory of occupation, interest and money (1936) criticizes neoclassical economics (he calls it “classical”) claiming that its postulates “are only applicable to a particular case, and not in general, because the conditions posed are an extreme case of all positions of equilibrium” and even more so because “the characteristics of that special case are not the characteristics of economic society in which today live us, reason why its teachings are deceptive and are disastrous if we try to apply them to the real facts”. (9)

Moreover, being himself a great mathematician, criticizes the “mathematization” of economic analysis holding that “too much of recent mathematical economics is a simple mixture, as vague as the original assumptions that sustain it, which allows the author to lose sight of the complexities and interdependencies of the real world in a maze of pretentious and unhelpful symbols”. (10)

In that sense, Keynes seeks to recover the epistemological approach of the classics, ie political economy recover and thereby writes that “the purpose of our analysis does not provide a mechanism or method of blind manipulation to give us an answer infallible but provide ourselves with an organized method of reasoning on specific problems”. (11)

The second neoclassical counter-revolution

After their first reaction from radical rejection of the theory of Keynes, the neoclassical economists were more “intelligent” and sought a containment mechanism considering all the General theory as a particular case which could be seamlessly integrated in the Walrasian schema. As Paul Davidson shows in Controversies in Post-Keynesian Economics (1994), these reactions faced the different generations of economists: “A more than one decade of the publication of the General theory of John Maynard Keynes, a controversy arose in the economics profession among the older neoclassical economists and the younger generation of advocates of Keynesian policies. The oldest were experts in neoclassical theory. Recognizing that the Keynesian analysis was logically incompatible with its own analytical model, the old economists despised the Keynes’s analysis as imperfect. The new generation had also been nourished by the neoclassical theory. They could have wanted any action to guide the economy in the great depression and could have looked for overthrowing their ancestors. But they did not want to entirely destroy the analytical structure because they had spent many years at school learning to know it. Therefore they tried to amalgamate the neoclassical theoretical analysis with the activist policies of Keynes and to develop an analytical framework which they called Neoclassical-Keynesian Synthesis. This synthesis attempted to integrate economic policies of the 20th century proposed by John Maynard Keynes with neoclassical theory of the 19th century that includes Say's law and the axiom of neutrality of money as a proposal in the long term”. (12)

The result of this attempt -summed up in the famous IS-LM diagram- maintained the exterior lines of the Keynes’s theory, but the essence is lost. Even so, despite all these characteristics, which did not have much to do with what Keynes had resulted in his General Theory, “it is told to the students, that they did not need to read the difficult and tedious General Theory, but that they could study the IS-LM model, which -as claim their teachers- includes all the Keynes's main ideas”. (13)

Thus, the economists, rather than strive to understand the complexity sobresimplificaron the Keynes’s ideas and, thus, they neutralized all the elements that could mean a return to the political economy and its multidisciplinary and realistic epistemology.

The conservative neoliberalism

The most famous episode of the origins of neo-liberalism is the formation, in 1947, in Switzerland, under the leadership of Friedrich von Hayek, of the Mont Pelerin Society, a group of large liberal intellectuals, among them were tam well Karl Popper, Ludwig von Mises and Milton Friedman, who were committed to the dissemination of the ideals of liberalism around the world in order to combat the advance of socialism. (14)

In this context, it is convenient to define politically neoliberalism comparing it historically with liberalism. When in the late eighteenth century liberalism advocated the legitimacy of capitalist society, it did from a revolutionary position against the status-quo, ie against the feudal and mercantilist privileges. In contrast, when in the middle oftwentieth century neoliberalism endorses the legitimacy of capitalist society, it does from a conservative position in favor of the status quo, ie, against any kind of society that could replace or overcome capitalism.

But neoliberalism is not only going to combat against socialism but also -sometimes - against Keynesianism and the position of this in favour of the intervention of the State in the economy. In this way, in the 1970s, the loss of dynamism in the developed economies, the fall of profit rates and stagflation were the perfect opportunity to neoliberalism in order to mount its attack on the welfare state. After years of Keynesianism, neoclassical economic theory regained its dominant role. With their mathematical models of growth and its macroeconomics models, also mathematical, based on rational expectations, neoclassical economic theory returned to "demonstrate" mathematically the self-regulating nature of the market. Milton Friedman and Robert Lucas were the exponents of this successful fight by the monopoly of the legitimate knowledge against Keynesianism and in favor of monetarism and the New Classical Macroeconomics, with its assumption of the “rational expectations”, did completely ineffective and unnecessary the Government Intervention in the Economy.

References

8. John Maynard Keynes, General theory of employment, interest and money (1936), Fondo de Cultura Económica, Mexico, 1992, p. 38 
9. John Maynard Keynes, General theory of occupation, interest, and money, op. cit., p. 15
10. Ibid, p. 286
11 Ibid., p. 285 
12. Quoted by: Mariel Manes, "Keynes method: an analysis of the general theory in the light of its methodology", note of class of the course of macroeconomics II, Universidad Nacional de la Plata, La Plata, August 2005, p.2.
13. Ibid.
14. See: R. M. Hartwell, A History of the Mont Pelerin Society, Ed. Liberty, Indianapolis, 1995.


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THE “DEPOLITIZATION” OF THE ECONOMICS (Part 1)

In its beginning as social discipline, the economic theory did not begin calling itself simply “Economics”, but “Political Economy”. This is something that comes from the mercantilist tradition in the year 1615, when Antonio de Montchretien coined this term with the publication of his Treatise on Political Economy, wanting to imply thereby that the economics and politics are intrinsically linked.

In that sense, this article aims to explain and make a critical analysis of the historical and epistemological process through which it has been tried “depoliticize” the economics which still happens today.

The classical revolution

The classical school was born in 1776 when Adam Smith published his famous book Investigations on the nature and causes of the wealth of nations. The publication of this book was a great revolution in the history of economic analysis by the fact that from there it began to consider the economics as an independent scientific discipline.

As is well known Adam Smith wasn't an economist by profession but rather a philosopher especially interested in ethics, politics and law. This is clearly reflected in several of the passages of Wealth of Nations when, beyond his initial approach about the “invisible hand”, Smith analyzes the interests of different social classes and their relationship with the good of the community in general. For example, with respect to the landowners he argues that, as they get their income without working, they often ignore their own interests and are therefore unable to understand the consequences of any policy that might be proposed.

As regards the bourgeoisie, Smith considers that this is the social class better able to appreciate their own interests and thus, of propelling economic development. But this does not inhibit him see that we must be wary of these men’s attitude toward public policy and that their interests necessarily come into conflict with those of the working class because, as he himself explains: “current salaries of labor depend on the contract established between two parties whose interests are by no way identical. Workers want to get the maximum possible and give employers want the minimum. While the first join to raise them, the seconds meet to lower them”. (1)

In addition to Adam Smith, among the main representatives of the classical school we have David Ricardo, Karl Marx and John Stuart Mill. None of them ever separated political analysis of economic analysis but that instead they always incorporated the first to the second. Clear examples of this are the titles of theirs major books: Principles of political economy and taxation (David Ricardo, 1817), Principles of political economy with some of their applications to social philosophy (John Stuart Mill, 1848), and Capital: critique of political economy (Karl Marx, 1867).

With regard to Ricardo, he takes as basic unit of analysis to social classes which distribute the social surplus and therefore proposes that “the main problem of political economy is to determine the laws that regulate the distribution” (2). Starting from this premise it is evident the relationship between economy and policy because Ricardo is going to come to defend the interests of the bourgeoisie against the landowners arguing that “the interests of the landowner are always opposite to the consumers and the manufacturers... Interest to the landlord that increases the cost of production, which does not favor the consumer... or the industrial... Therefore, all classes, except the landowners, will be affected by the rise in the price”. (3)

Even more radical than Ricardo in his political analysis of the economy is Marx who maintains the famous theory of class struggle: “The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles. Freeman and slave, patrician and plebian, lord and serf, guild-master and journeyman, in a word, oppressor and oppressed, stood in constant opposition to one another, carried on an uninterrupted, now hidden, now open fight, a fight that each time ended, either in a revolutionary reconstitution of society at large, or in the common ruin of the contending classes”. (4)

It is very important to note here the big difference from the analysis of Marx on the conflict of classes with respect to the previous classics. While Smith and Ricardo defended the interests of the capitalist bourgeoisie against the mercantilist and feudal privileges of landowners in a time in which the Industrial Revolution was just brewing, Marx defended the interests of the working class front the preponderance of the capitalist bourgeoisie in a context in which the Industrial Revolution had already been consolidated.

The first neoclassical counter-revolution

The first neoclassical counter-revolution was given at the end of the 19th century as a theoretical response to the uncomfortable policy implications of classical analysis, particularly the marxist, with regard to the conflict between classes. So Robinson and Eatwell explain us: “At the end of the 19th century, the focus of social conflict had moved from the antagonism of the capitalist and the landowner to the opposition of workers and capitalists. The fear and horror aroused by Marx’s work were exacerbated by the effect that throughout Europe produced the Paris Commune in 1871. The doctrines that suggest conflicts were no longer desirable. The theories that distracting attention, away from the antagonism of the social classes, had a good reception”. (5)

It is in this context that arise marginalist and neoclassical schools which main representatives were Jules Dupuit, William Stanley Jevons, León Walras and Alfred Marshall. Facing the classic paradigm, which was based on social classes as basic units of analysis, this new approach will support a radical subjectivism in which the atomized individual who seeks to maximize his benefit is the basic unit from which is built the entire building of the economic theorist. This artificially removes any political or sociological factors of the economic analysis and is in this sense that the English teacher Eric Roll maintains that “schools of the utility claim their validity by a different reason than the classical school because they hold that formulate a theory of value independent of any specific social order. (...) Some theories that had been made ​​on the basis of equal individuals dedicated to save and work could not say anything about the social differentiation of these individuals”. (6)

Economists of the Austrian school, and especially its founder Carl Menger, were mainly responsible for the introduction of this mentioned subjectivism in economic analysis. But in reality were León Walras and Alfred Marshall who gave the final blow to the classical economics, understood as “Political economy”, when they matematizaron the economic theory based on their analysis of general equilibrium and partial equilibrium, respectively. It is absolutely impossible for a mathematical system can consistently illustrate the intrinsic relationship that has politics with economy. This was clearly perceived by Alfred Marshall himself who, although "was a mathematician who could use, and in fact used, algebraic and geometric technique to show the exact relationships between different variables in certain well-defined situations, (...) never felt fully satisfied with the purely mechanical study of abstract forces that act in isolation. (...) Marshall who was a realistic deep connoisseur of the complexity of economic life, (...) was convinced that it should be something that this paradigm could not successfully assimilate ". (7)

References

1. Adam Smith, Research on the nature and causes of the wealth of nations (1776), Ed. Modern Library, New York, 1937, p. 149
2. David Ricardo, Principles of political economy and taxation (1817), Ed. Everyman, 1926, p. 1
3. David Ricardo, Principles of political economy and taxation, op. op. cit., p. 225
4. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, The Communist Manifesto (1848), elaleph.com (electronic PDF), 2000, p. 25
5. Joan Robinson and John Eatwell, Introduction to modern economics, Fondo de Cultura Económica, Mexico, 1976, p. 54
6. Eric Roll, History of economic doctrines, Fondo de Cultura Económica, Mexico, 1978, p. 366
7. Eric Roll, History of economic doctrines, op. op. cit., p. 389.


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