A Macroeconomics Debate at Cambridge

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I gave the talk below to the Cam­bridge Soci­ety for Eco­nom­ic Plu­ral­ism yes­ter­day. This stu­dent-formed soci­ety is attempt­ing to open eco­nom­ics to debate–something which, despite the enor­mous schisms that exist with­in eco­nom­ics, is in prac­tice sad­ly lack­ing.

Econ­o­mists of one school of thought (such as the Neo­clas­si­cal) don’t lis­ten to or debate with those from oth­ers (such as the Post Key­ne­sian or Austrian)-as you can see from Cochrane’s dis­mis­sive remarks about non-Neo­clas­si­cal eco­nom­ics in the Play­boy arti­cle on eco­nom­ics. Even with­in schools (such as the Neo­clas­si­cal), dif­fer­ent fac­tions bare­ly com­mu­ni­cate with each oth­er-as you can see by perus­ing some of the “Fresh­wa­ter, New Clas­si­cal” ver­sus “Salt­wa­ter, Old Hick­sian” (whoops, sor­ry, they think they’re “New Key­ne­sians”) blog entries.

Deregulation and market failure

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The old­er I get, the more cyn­i­cal I become about gov­ern­ment inter­ven­tion in the econ­o­my.

That state­ment might appear to be either a recan­ta­tion of every­thing I’ve ever argued, or a sign of the usu­al tale of left-wingers mov­ing to the right, and right-wingers to the left, as life expe­ri­ence tem­pers youth­ful exu­ber­ance. It’s nei­ther (well, okay, maybe it’s a bit of the lat­ter), because my devel­op­ing posi­tion reflects the com­plex­i­ties of a mixed econ­o­my.

The IMF goes radical?

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An IMF work­ing paper has received a lot of atten­tion recent­ly – and not for the usu­al rea­sons. Where­as the IMF is usu­al­ly crit­i­cised for being dog­mat­ic about free mar­ket eco­nom­ics and effec­tive­ly behold­en to the banks, this paper is being both praised and crit­i­cised for want­i­ng to rad­i­cal­ly reform them.

This clear­ly isn’t offi­cial IMF pol­i­cy, but the fact that it has been released by the IMF is note­wor­thy, and the paper deserves care­ful atten­tion. It is an enor­mous paper, not just in length (56 pages of text) but also in the range of top­ics cov­ered, and it will take at least three posts to do it jus­tice. In this one, I’ll focus on its analy­sis of today’s mon­e­tary sys­tem.

A Bubble of Ludicrous Pettifoggery

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By Philip Soos

Recent­ly, Aus­tralian prop­er­ty ana­lyst Ter­ry Ryder, in an arti­cle on Prop­er­ty Observ­er, voiced com­plaints about hous­ing bub­ble advo­cates. His issue is “wait­ing for some­one who sub­scribes to the bub­ble the­o­ry to actu­al­ly define it. So far, nobody has. The term implies that some­thing has been over-inflat­ed and will burst.” Of course, Steve Keen has already done so in his volu­mi­nous and crit­i­cal work reach­ing back for over a decade.

Let’s go “Back, to the Future!”

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If you were told the fol­low­ing graph showed two indi­ca­tors of Australia’s eco­nom­ic health, and one of them had to be addressed urgent­ly, which one would you expect politi­cians and econ­o­mists to try to bring under con­trol first?

If you picked the blue line, you’ve obvi­ous­ly not a politi­cian. The blue is the ratio of pri­vate debt to GDP in Aus­tralia; the red line is the ratio of gov­ern­ment debt to GDP (debt to the bank­ing sec­tor only; both series come from RBA table D02). The red line is the one that both sides of pol­i­tics in Can­ber­ra are obsessed about; the blue one they both ignore.

Support the World Economics Association

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I’m not the only econ­o­mist cam­paign­ing to bring about a new, empir­i­cal, real­is­tic economics–far from it. In fact there is an asso­ci­a­tion ded­i­cat­ed to this end with over 10,000 sub­scribers: the World Eco­nom­ics Asso­ci­a­tion.

As is often the case, the for­ma­tion and man­age­ment of the WEA has rest­ed on the shoul­ders of one per­son: Edward Full­brook, the UK-based schol­ar who kept the PAECON move­ment alive after its birth with the French stu­dent “Protest Against Autis­tic Eco­nom­ics” revolt back in 2000. With­out his ener­gy and com­mit­ment, that spark lit by the French stu­dents might have petered out. Thanks to Ed’s efforts, the WEA is flour­ish­ing, and has almost as many mem­bers of the Amer­i­can Eco­nom­ic Asso­ci­a­tion. The WEA’s pur­pose is:

The Myth of Fractional Reserve Banking

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Three Busi­ness Spec­ta­tor read­ers con­tact­ed me direct­ly about one top­ic last week – bank mon­ey cre­ation, and how bank reserves work. Fol­low­ing an old jour­nal­ism adage that three direct enquiries about a top­ic from the pub­lic means that everybody’s inter­est­ed in it, I’m div­ing into wonkdom to answer their queries in detail here. Ignore this post if the adage isn’t true for you, but if it is and you haven’t yet had your morn­ing Java, now’s the time for that stroll to the barista.

To read the rest of this post, click here

Positive Linking and Financial Crises

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This is the sec­ond of two con­tributed pieces by Paul Ormerod, the author of Pos­i­tive Link­ing and, as I not­ed in my last post, in my opin­ion the most effec­tive devel­op­er of mul­ti-agent mod­els of the econ­o­my.

 Did Econ­o­mists Go Mad? Net­works and the Eco­nom­ic Cri­sis

The con­duct of eco­nom­ic pol­i­cy mak­ing over the ten to fif­teen years pri­or to the finan­cial cri­sis of 2008–9 exem­pli­fies the fun­da­men­tal prob­lems of the con­ven­tion­al mind­set of eco­nom­ics. At the time, it seemed as though clever pol­i­cy mak­ers devis­ing clever rules and reg­u­la­tions to set the right incen­tives, to which eco­nom­i­cal­ly ratio­nal agents would respond appro­pri­ate­ly, had indeed solved key prob­lems of macro­eco­nom­ic man­age­ment. Eco­nom­ic growth in the West was strong and steady, and both unem­ploy­ment and infla­tion every­where remained low.

Open For Offers

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Aus­tralia and the Uni­ver­si­ty of West­ern Syd­ney have been very good to me for the last 20 years. I have been able to devel­op a unique mon­e­tary dynam­ic approach to eco­nom­ics “under the radar” out here, with the sup­port of four con­sec­u­tive Heads of School who have favored a plu­ral­ist approach to eco­nom­ics.

But it may be time for a change. Did you see the blog post I put up just this week about need­ing an Aus­tralian Indus­try Part­ner for an appli­ca­tion to the Aus­tralian Research Coun­cil for a Link­age Grant?:

Aus­tralian Indus­try Part­ner need­ed