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Comments on: Conception of economics: Comment from Andrew W http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2008/11/05/conception-of-economics-comment-from-andrew-w/ The Visible Hand in Economics Thu, 20 Nov 2008 04:35:51 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 By: agnitio http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2008/11/05/conception-of-economics-comment-from-andrew-w/#comment-3304 Thu, 20 Nov 2008 04:35:51 +0000 http://tvhe.wordpress.com/?p=1849#comment-3304 all these capital letters are making my eyes hurt!

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By: Matt Nolan http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2008/11/05/conception-of-economics-comment-from-andrew-w/#comment-3303 Thu, 20 Nov 2008 03:26:29 +0000 http://tvhe.wordpress.com/?p=1849#comment-3303 “I THINK WE AGREE MORE THAN YOU MIGHT THINK”

I agree.

I guess in New Zealand we don’t have the feeling that behavioural, environmental, and resource economics are peripheral. As a result I do view the core of economics as being somewhat larger.

My primary distinction is between “economic science” and “economic policy”. Economic science is the pursuit of internally consistent models – piles of them – where as many of the relevant parameters are made obvious as is technically possible. Economic science provides us with a framework for analysing issues – but no direction on how to.

Economic policy involves the use of value judgments and certain empirical “facts”. When these are combined to generalised models we get a policy conclusion – but not before.

Ultimatlely, if I had to make a hard core of economics it might not include behavioural economics – but then it would not include macro-economics or applied microeconomics either. It would just be a mathematical description of choice and trade-offs.

However, behavioural, environmental, and macro-economics would all enter at the same time – all apply different value judgments to the overall core.

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By: JEFFREY M DOYLE http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2008/11/05/conception-of-economics-comment-from-andrew-w/#comment-3302 Thu, 20 Nov 2008 03:18:34 +0000 http://tvhe.wordpress.com/?p=1849#comment-3302 MATT:

I THINK WE AGREE MORE THAN YOU MIGHT THINK. THE STUMBLING POINT, MAY HINGE ON MY STATEMENT THAT “…Blind perpetuation of the pursuit of internal consistency at the expense of external validity does not make Economics a science-it makes it a religion of collected ICONIC IDEALS-whose relevance cannot be questioned.” NOTICE THE USE OF THE PHRASE “…BLIND PERPETUATION…AT THE EXPENSE OF EXTERNAL VALIDITY…”

YOU ARE ENTIRELY CORRECT IN YOUR STATEMENT THAT “…A model without value judgments will not provide a result…”. THE PROBLEM IS THAT RESOURCE ECONOMICS, ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS, BEHAVIOURAL ECONOMICS ETC., ARE CONSIDERED A SUBSET OF MAINSTREAM ECONOMICS-IN FACT THEY ARE CONSIDERED BY MOST AS “HETERODOX” ECONOMICS. IF YOU CONSULT YOUR FRIENDLY DICTIONARY YOU WILL NOTE THAT SYNONYMS FOR HETERODOX INCLUDE: UNORTHODOX AND HERETICAL.

MAINSTREAM ECONOMICS-WHICH IS THE PRIMARY PRODUCT OF EDUCATION-AT LEAST IN THE GOOD OLD USA-IS THE MOST INFLUENTIAL IN SHAPING THINKING. YES, THEY ACKNOWLEDGE THE TERMINOLOGY, BUT HAVE BEEN VERY SLOW TO INTEGRATE THAT THINKING INTO PREDICTIVE MODELS.

MY ANALOGY TO METEOROLOGY IS WORTH REPEATING. JUST YESTERDAY I READ THAT NEW SUPERCOMPUTERS OPERATE AT OVER ONE TERABYTE PER SECOND. CERTAINLY RUNNING VARIOUS MODELS, WITH VARYING ASSUMPTIONS IS FEASIBLE, IF PREDICTIVE ACCURACY IS OUR GOAL. THIS IN NO WAY COMPROMISES THE NEED FOR INTERNAL CONSISTENCY WITHIN EACH MODEL.

LET ME KNOW WHAT YOU THINK.

JEFFREY

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By: Matt Nolan http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2008/11/05/conception-of-economics-comment-from-andrew-w/#comment-3301 Mon, 17 Nov 2008 00:15:47 +0000 http://tvhe.wordpress.com/?p=1849#comment-3301 “I would compare the problems with economic modeling the that of modeling extemely complex physical systems rather than just chucking it all in the too hard basket by saying “individuals make choices””

But economics doesn’t put it in the too hard basket – we start from the premise “individuals make choices” and then try to understand how those choices produce phenomenon. Merely moving off statistical regularities without taking into account how these regularities occurred does not tell us anything.

Economists cannot observe preferences, however we can create an objective description of how people make choices given their preferences. Once we have this we can apply some subjective definition of what we think these preferences are in order to get a result. The first bit is economic science, the second bit is applied economics/political economy/welfare economics.

“Perhaps thats the difference between “science” and “art” sticking to the objective vs allowing yourself to be swayed by the subjective”

Exactly, I think we are actually on the same page here.

“Blind perpetuation of the pursuit of internal consistency at the expense of external validity does not make Economics a science-it makes it a religion of collected ICONIC IDEALS-whose relevance cannot be questioned”

Although I think we agree in terms of a lot of points I don’t agree with this. The focus on internal consistency and model building is a separate task to that of policy making. External validity is only ignored in the case where the modeler is not aiming to provide a prescriptive portion to their model but is instead interested in checking the logical consistency of some fundamental premises.

A model without value judgments will not provide a result. Value judgments are evaluated based on “external validity”. So the actual practice of applied economics will use this. The fact that some economists focus on checking the logical consistency of mathematical models does not make economics the same as “dogma” – these economists are providing a different service to the overall body of knowledge.

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By: bopdilly http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2008/11/05/conception-of-economics-comment-from-andrew-w/#comment-3300 Thu, 13 Nov 2008 19:07:03 +0000 http://tvhe.wordpress.com/?p=1849#comment-3300 Excellent blog! Interesting article and very informative! I will necessarily subscribe for this blog. http://lowsalego.com/map.html

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By: JEFFREY M DOYLE http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2008/11/05/conception-of-economics-comment-from-andrew-w/#comment-3297 Sun, 09 Nov 2008 03:51:58 +0000 http://tvhe.wordpress.com/?p=1849#comment-3297 Economics Needs A Scientific Revolution

My name is Jeffrey M Doyle. I ATTENDED

THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN, ANN

ARBOR AND MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY,

RECEIVING MY Ph.D. IN 1977.

Economics is not physics. The behaviour of

human beings is not as predictable as

matter in physics [be it sub-atomic or

macro.] While I understand the desire of

many Economists to regard their Discipline

as a deterministic, mathematically precise

science, the reality is [with notable

exceptions conceded] it is not a

mechanistically elegant discipline like

physics.

INTERDISCIPLINARY UTILIZATION AND

INTEGRATION OF PHYSICS, BIOLOGY AND

ESPECIALLY THERMODYNAMICS

INTO ECONOMIC ANALYSES, WILL GREATLY

ENHANCE OUR ABILITY TO ADDRESS AND

SOLVE CURRENT SOCIAL PROBLEMS–

ESPECIALLY IN THE THE AREAS OF OF

ENERGY AND ECOSYSTEM STABILITY

I HAVE NOTHING AGAINST MATHEMATICAL BASED MODELING-TO THE CONTRARY I EMBRACE IT WHOLEHEARTEDLY. MY PROBLEM IS THAT UNLIKE [FOR EXAMPLE] METEOROLOGY, ECONOMICS DOES NOT WELCOME THE INTEGRATION OF NEW RELEVANT FACTORS INTO THEIR PRECISE MATHEMATICAL MODELS.

WHEN METEOROLOGISTS ATTEMPT TO MODEL THE ATMOSPHERE OR PREDICT THE PROJECTED PATH OF A TROPICAL SYSTEM, THEY USE MULTIPLE MODELS, BASED ON DIFFERENT ASSUMPTIONS. IF THERE IS A GOOD AGREEMENT AMONG THE POSSIBLE OUTCOMES OR PROJECTIONS, THEN THEIR IS ALSO A MUCH HIGHER PROBABILITY THAT THE PROJECTED OUTCOME IS ACCURATE AND RELEVANT.

I think the reputation of economics is strong enough that people think we have things to offer. So, as long as we are realistic and humble, we will have an audience and people will take economics more seriously.

In the world these days, the complexity is such

that people know that nobody knows

everything. That’s not the expectation, the

expectation is that something useful can be learned from economics.

Blind perpetuation of the pursuit of internal consistency at the expense of external validity does not make Economics a science-it makes it a religion of collected ICONIC IDEALS-whose relevance cannot be questioned

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By: Andrew W http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2008/11/05/conception-of-economics-comment-from-andrew-w/#comment-3299 Fri, 07 Nov 2008 18:21:02 +0000 http://tvhe.wordpress.com/?p=1849#comment-3299 There is another problem with creating accurate objective economic forecast that I don’t dispute, which is that while I’ll argue that while the actions of masses of people should, in principle, be predictable, what makes them far less predictable is influential individuals whose actions can’t be foreseen.
I see the main driver of human actions as their instincts, and Human instincts are just animal instincts in a bigger cranium. How a mob of cattle acts is usually fairly predictable, except when you get that one #@^**#! animal that breaks from or turns the mob unexpectedly.

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By: Andrew W http://www.tvhe.co.nz/2008/11/05/conception-of-economics-comment-from-andrew-w/#comment-3298 Fri, 07 Nov 2008 17:52:27 +0000 http://tvhe.wordpress.com/?p=1849#comment-3298 The article at Nature is now behind a pay-wall, but it’s also here:
http://xxx.lanl.gov/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/0810/0810.5306v1.pdf

I would compare the problems with economic modeling the that of modeling extemely complex physical systems rather than just chucking it all in the too hard basket by saying “individuals make choices”. We will never have perfect economic models mainly for the same reason that we’ll never have perfect atmospheric models, but climate scientists would – and do- make a huge mistake when they make a departure from science and start puting their own subjective spin on their observations.
Perhaps thats the difference between “science” and “art” sticking to the objective vs allowing yourself to be swayed by the subjective. By surrendering to the temptation of including their own biases, individual economists ensure that they will be more wrong than they would otherwise be.

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