latimes.com / Op-Ed

Not their fathers' economics [or their mothers' economics, we hope]

Students seeking real-world answers are questioning long-held tenets.

By Eric J. Weiner
April 11, 2012

There is a growing student protest movement against orthodox economics
that could change the field as we know it.
If it is sustained, historians likely will cite Nov. 2, 2011, as the
start of the revolution. On that day at Harvard University, roughly 70
students organized a walkout of an introductory economics class taught
by N. Gregory Mankiw.

Mankiw is the former head of the Council of Economic Advisers for
President George W. Bush and an advisor to Republican presidential
candidate Mitt Romney. He is also the author of "Principles of
Economics," the predominant textbook used in introductory economics
classes worldwide. Not surprisingly, he has an extremely traditional,
market-oriented view of the discipline.

The students who walked out of Mankiw's class explained their
reasoning in an open letter printed in the Harvard Political Review.
It began with this declaration: "Today, we are walking out of your
class, Economics 10, in order to express our discontent with the bias
inherent in this introductory economics course. We are deeply
concerned about the way that this bias affects students, the
University [sic], and our greater society."

They went on to explain that instead of presenting a broad
introduction to economics, Mankiw's teaching was narrowly focused, did
not offer alternative approaches to orthodox economic models and
ultimately was complicit in perpetuating systemic global inequality.

Their argument struck a chord with the wider economics community.
Suddenly, many more economists started to acknowledge, at least in
private, that something is terribly wrong with the field.

If you think all of this seems to be coming out of the blue, you're
not alone, because much of the debate is taking place behind the walls
of cloistered academia. Indeed, sometimes you don't even realize that
there's a social revolution going on until you find yourself in the
middle of one. That's what's happened to me.

I work for the Institute for New Economic Thinking, a research and
education foundation in New York. Each year we hold an international
conference that gathers major figures from the global economic
community to discuss new ideas for addressing the critical challenges
facing society.

Our conference this year starts Thursday in Berlin. Considering the
location and timing, our focus naturally is on the financial crisis in
Europe.

To incorporate some younger voices into the mix, we decided to invite
a few students. So we put out word that we were accepting applications
for 25 doctoral candidates from around the world to attend the
conference, all expenses paid, and actively participate in our program
and panel discussions. We figured that we'd receive from 100 to 150
responses. We got 563.

Obviously, we were caught off-guard by the level of enthusiasm. But in
that heaping pile of applications we also could see a budding
community of young scholars who don't want to pursue economics as it's
traditionally been taught.

These students are frustrated by a field that they believe could
provide so much to society but instead is mired in outmoded thinking.
Today's economics is dominated by ideas, like the efficient market
hypothesis, making such sweeping generalizations that they render
human beings practically unrecognizable. Do people ever have "perfect
information" or a complete understanding of their best interests? Of
course not. They're humans.

In paper after paper, the students applying to attend the conference
described their frustrations with pursuing fresh avenues of economic
inquiry that are applicable to real-world issues. The problem is that
the economics establishment doesn't want them to do this. In fact, the
discipline is so dominated by orthodox ideology that the students risk
jeopardizing their careers simply by engaging in research that runs
counter to economics' fundamental assumptions.

As one student wrote in his application, "During the last 40 years
economics captivated itself in an axiomatic hypothetical theory
prison. Freedom of opinion, one of the most fundamental
characteristics of an enlightened and pluralistic society,
disappeared."

Now these students are looking to the senior members of the economics
profession for guidance. Of course, this is something our institute
wants to encourage. So we decided to set up an overflow room at the
conference specifically for students to view the proceedings on a live
video stream. For these attendees, however, we couldn't pay any
expenses.

We weren't sure what to expect. But the demand became so great that we
had to limit access to this overflow room as well.
At this point, hundreds of students from around the globe are making
their way to Berlin to spend four days watching the conference,
sharing ideas with major economic figures who are eager to visit with
them — the next generation — and discussing new approaches with their
peers. Suddenly it feels as if we're setting up the coffeehouses and
backroom parlors for the fomenters of an underground uprising.

Why is this happening, and why now? Obviously, the global financial
crisis brought the failures of the economics profession into stark
relief. But there still hasn't been a significant public movement of
established professional economists away from orthodox theories.
However, as the pernicious effects of instability and inequality
become part of daily life, frustration with stale economic ideas is
starting to turn into action — at least on the part of some.

So this is where economics finds itself today, stuck between failed
methodologies and whispered realities. It can continue to produce
elegant theorems that work only by ignoring obvious real-world
situations and conditions. Or it can break free of its restrictions
and apply its rigor to addressing society's most intractable problems.

The choice is up to the economics establishment. But the revolution has begun.

Eric J. Weiner is the senior editor and director of communications at
the Institute for New Economic Thinking in New York.

Copyright © 2012, Los Angeles Times


-- 
Jim Devine / "In science one tries to tell people, in such a way as to
be understood by everyone, something that no one ever knew before. But
in poetry, it's the exact opposite." -- Paul Dirac. Social science is
in the middle.... and usually in a muddle.
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