From: real-world economics review <[email protected]>

Voting is now open for the Ignoble Prize for Economics



The Ignoble Prize for Economics is to be awarded to the three
economists who contributed most to enabling the Global Financial
Collapse (GFC)



Voting is ultra quick and easy.  Click here:

http://rwer.wordpress.com/poll-procedures-for-the-ignoble-prize-for-economics/vote-for-the-ignoble-prize-for-economics/

and you will see the ballot. Click on your three choices and then the
big yellow "vote" button.



22 economists were nominated for the prize.  Through consultation
with contributors to the Real-World Economics Review Blog, the
following short list of ten, including two pairs of economists, has
been selected for the ballot.



Dossiers of short-listed of nominees for the Ignoble Prize for Economics



Fischer Black and Myron Scholes

They jointly developed the Black-Scholes model which led to the
explosive growth of financial derivatives.  The importance given to
their hypothetical calculation of derivative prices was baneful not
just because it was bogus, but also because it meant that relevant
and often urgent real-world economic research was widely neglected by
the profession.



Eugene Fama

His "efficient market theory" provided the moral umbrella for all
sorts of greed, predatory behaviour and incompetent corporate
management.  It also provided the rationale for deregulation.  And
his theory's widespread acceptance meant that "discussion of investor
irrationality, of bubbles, of destructive speculation had virtually
disappeared from academic discourse."  In these three ways Fama's
work created the environment which made possible the GFC.



Milton Friedman

He propagated the delusion, through his misunderstanding of the
scientific method, that an economy can be accurately modeled using
counterfactual propositions about its nature.  This, together with
his simplistic model of money, encouraged the development of the
financial theories with unrealistic assumptions that facilitated the
GFC.  In short, he opened the door for everyone subsequently to
theorize without fear of having to be attached to reality.



Alan Greenspan

As Chairman of the Federal Reserve System from 1987 to 2006, he both
led the over expansion of money and credit that created the bubble
that burst and aggressively promoted the view that financial markets
are naturally efficient and in no need of regulation.  Before a
Congressional committee on 28 October 2008 Greenspan confessed that
his theoretical beliefs of 40 years were now proven to be without
foundation, hence his total confusion and failure at his job.

Assar Lindbeck
By working to make the Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences ("Nobel
Prize in Economics") almost exclusively a prize for neoclassical
economists, this Swedish economist has contributed significantly to
the conversion of the economics profession and of world public
opinion to market fundamentalism.


Robert Lucas

His development of the rational expectations hypothesis, which
defined rationality as the capacity to accurately predict the future,
both served to maintain Friedman's proposition that monetary factors
do not affect the real economy and, in the name of "rigor", distanced
economics even further from reality than Friedman had thought possible.

Richard Portes

As Secretary-General of the Royal Economic Society from 1992-2008, he
helped suppress worries expressed by non-mainstream economists about
developments in the financial sector.  In 2007 he wrote a Report for
the Icelandic Chamber of Commerce giving a clean bill of health to
Icelandic banks only a few months before they collapsed.  When
investigators called attention to the real state of Icelandic
banking, he wrote a series of letters to the Financial Times
defending the soundness of Icelandic banks and imputing professional
incompetence to those who doubted it.



Edward Prescott and Finn Kydland

For jointly developing and popularizing "Real Business Cycle" theory,
which by omitting the role of credit greatly diminished the economics
profession's understanding of dynamic macroeconomic processes.



Paul Samuelson

Through his textbook Economics: An Introductory Analysis (19 English
language editions and translated into 40 languages), he popularized
neoclassical economics, contributing more than any other economist to
its diffusion and thereby to the deregulation of financial markets
which made possible the GFC.



Larry Summers

As US Secretary of the Treasury (formerly an economist at Harvard and
the World Bank), he worked successfully for the repeal of the
Glass-Steagall Act, which since the Great Crash of 1929 had kept
deposit banking separate from casino banking.  He also worked with
Greenspan and Wall Street interests to torpedo efforts to regulate
derivatives.


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