There’s an excellent article in The Age today on the mad methods of neoclassical economists. The author is Martin Feil, who was once a director of the Industries Assistance Commission–a previous incarnation of what is now called the Productivity Commission:
The article is entitled We can’t live on moonbeams and air.
I plan to tackle similar issues in my next two Debtwatch Reports. November’s (the 28th, which is also the second anniversary issue–I started the report in November 2006) focuses on the data that neoclassical theory directs the attention of economists to, and the data that the theory causes them to ignore. Crucially, the latter includes private debt–and Feil makes a similar set of observations. On the data that the RBA’s neoclassical economists consider important: