http://www.thenation.com/article/hip-heterodoxy
Hip Heterodoxy
Christopher Hayes | May 24, 2007

It's a Friday night in January, and I am searching for a free 
drink among 9,000 economists. Every year a sizable portion of the 
nation's economists descend on some lucky city for the Allied 
Social Science Associations Annual Meeting, the economics field's 
largest gathering, a kind of carnival of suits and supply curves. 
Most academic disciplines have a similar annual convention, but no 
other can boast the same influence on American politics and 
policy--after all, Presidents don't appoint a council of 
anthropological advisers. It doesn't take long for mainstream 
academic thinking to become the foundation for the government's 
macroeconomic policy. In 1968 Milton Friedman, then president of 
the American Economics Association (AEA), devoted his presidential 
address to arguing against Keynesian meddling in the economy and 
for a monetary policy focused on restraining inflation. A decade 
later, his prescriptions would be largely adopted. In 2005 onetime 
Reagan adviser Martin Feldstein called for Social Security 
privatization just as Republicans in Washington were mobilizing 
(unsuccessfully) toward the same end.

This year's conference attendees are packed into the mammoth 
glass-and-brick Chicago Hyatt. On the second evening, I come 
across two receptions facing off across a basement hallway. If you 
wanted to get a sense of the status hierarchies of the profession, 
this was a perfect tableau. On one side, a reception in honor of 
the impending rebroadcast of the late Milton Friedman's famed 
miniseries Free to Choose, a wildly successful bit of 
laissez-faire propaganda now set to reach a new generation of 
unsuspecting blue-state audiences. The room is packed and festive, 
with several Nobel laureates milling about, chicken satay skewers 
available for noshing and an open bar. (A man behind me in line 
complains of the free drinks that "Milton wouldn't approve! 
Because we're not getting the true price of the drinks.") Across 
the hall, a reception hosted by the Economic Policy Institute 
(EPI), a left-liberal Washington think tank that advocates 
policies--higher minimum wage, easier paths to unionization, 
social insurance--that are in almost every detail the opposite of 
everything that Friedman stood for. In that room, perhaps thirty 
people gather, picking at the cheese cubes and shelling out $6 a 
drink at the cash bar. The EPI's Max Sawicky, an imposing presence 
with a long gray ponytail and growling voice, tells me the turnout 
is better than usual.

After grabbing a free drink in the Friedman reception, I strike up 
a conversation with economist Michael Perelman in the hallway. 
Balding, with long gray hair, he has the intense, unblinking mien 
of a self-published science fiction writer, or a former grad 
student of Timothy Leary's. Perelman, who is there for the EPI 
reception, works at the margins of the discipline; he is one of a 
few hundred self-described "heterodox" economists at the 
conference. His last book, Railroading Economics, was about the 
creation of the "free market mythology," and his next book is 
titled The Confiscation of American Prosperity: From Right-Wing 
Extremism and Economic Ideology to the Next Great Depression. I 
ask him about how he relates to the so-called mainstream of his 
profession. "It's a mafia," he says quietly, his eyes roving over 
to the suits spilling out of the Freedom to Choose room.

(clip)
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