Monday, April 20, 2020
Manichism In Economics Essays - Economic Theories,
  Manichism In Economics    The Manichaean character of economics. Charles Kindleberger. Abstract: Economics  is said to have adopted a certain degree of dualism. None of its tenets have  been absolute in terms of social effectiveness. To survive in an economic  system, rules must be enforced to ensure the peace. There are times when  pluralism is good for a society as a way recognizing social differences.    However, there are times, such as war, when the rule of a central authority is  preferred. Laws in economics are hardly permanent since such regulations are  enacted and enforced only when the need arises. Full Text: COPYRIGHT 1999 M.E.    Sharpe, Inc. Are there any absolute answers in economics? This international  trade economist and economic historian has his doubts. The answer to most  questions is "It depends." Manichaeus, as we all know from the Oxford  dictionary; was a Persian philosopher of the third century A.D., whose system  held some sway throughout the Roman empire and Asia until the fifth century  (with some elements lasting to the thirteenth). He believed in dualism, the  coexistence of good and evil, with Satan coequal with God. I suggest that  economics has a heavy dose of dualism, though I hesitate to characterize views  that differ from mine as evil or satanic. In the first edition of Economics: An    Introductory Analysis the only one I read when I was teaching the introductory  course - Paul Samuelson wrote that when one is offered a choice, it is not  legitimate to say "both." I hesitate to differ from my esteemed  colleague, but "both" is often a correct answer, as occasionally is  "neither." Is one supposed to believe in Say's law that supply creates  its own demand, or Keynes's law that demand creates the needed supply? In the  course of a long academic life, I have developed Kindleberger's law of  alternatives, based on historical examples. Often after extended policy debate,  the powers that be end up doing both. In 1931 Keynes recommended tariffs, others  devaluation or depreciation. Outcome: both. During World War II there was a  vigorous Allied debate as to how best to push back German railheads from the    Normandy beaches, whether by bombing marshaling yards, as the British called  them, or bridges. Answer again: both. Nor did questioning a German prisoner of  war, General des Transportwesen West, under Marshall von Runstedt, make clear  which was better. American interrogators got the answer from Oberst (colonel)    Hoffner they wanted - bridges - and the British theirs - marshaling yards.    Robert Heilbroner has been a Classicist (Say's law?) and a Keynesian (Keynes's  law?) and has been mildly infected with Marxism, but has never to my knowledge  adopted the absolutist position of denying all truth to the polar opposite. In  economic debates we have capitalism versus socialism; perfect markets with  rational and informed suppliers and demanders versus market failure; monetarism  versus Keynesianism; fundamentals (such as geography demography, technology, and  perhaps history) versus institutions, path dependency; externalities, and  occasional breakouts of herd behavior ending in financial crisis; free banking  versus regulation and central banks; public choice versus markets (governments  make mistakes but markets seldom do, and such mistakes as they rarely make are  quickly corrected); centralization versus pluralism; rules versus decisions by  authorities . . . One could go on. In international trade, which I taught before    I learned the delight of historical economics, I was wont to say that the answer  to every question in economics is, "It depends," and that it usually  depended on the magnitude of the elasticities. President Truman sought one-armed  economic advisers because of his unhappiness with the answer to his question  "On the one hand, . . .; on the other hand, . . ." I have admiration  approaching reverence for the thirty-third president of the United States, but I  cannot endorse his pleas for an answer of "Yes," or perhaps  "No," followed by a number. Let me illustrate this deeply  philosophical or perhaps cowardly position with a few examples drawn from  history. I skip capitalism versus socialism because most of us believe in the  mixed economy, perhaps leaning slightly to one or the other, but in any case  nowhere near the limits. Such, as I interpret it, is the Heilbroner take on    Marxism since his infection at (by?) the New School. Centralization versus  pluralism can be disposed of in two sentences, though I have a book of 100 pages  on the issue: In quiet times, pluralism is better because it is more democratic.    In crisis or on deep moral issues such as slavery or racism, some central  authority is preferable. It is, however, difficult to    
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