Click  on 

 


Stiglitz:
<http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/EconomistsView/~3/_qDSbjSUq2Q/stiglitz-neede
d-a-new-economic-paradigm.html>  Needed: a New Economic Paradigm


 

To get to the comments.

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Michael Gurstein
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 1:12 PM
To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION'
Subject: [Futurework] FW: [p2p-research] Stiglitz: Needed: a New Economic
Paradigm

 

Note the comments that follow... (and our very own "Sandwichman" is the
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-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ryan
Sent: Friday, August 20, 2010 9:03 AM
To: Peer-To-Peer Research List
Subject: [p2p-research] Stiglitz: Needed: a New Economic Paradigm

 

 


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Stiglitz:
<http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/EconomistsView/~3/_qDSbjSUq2Q/stiglitz-neede
d-a-new-economic-paradigm.html>  Needed: a New Economic Paradigm


via Economist's View <http://economistsview.typepad.com/economistsview/>  by
Mark Thoma on 19/08/10

 

Joseph Stiglitz says adding bells and whistles to the current vintage of
macroeconomic models will not fix what is wrong with them, "Nothing less
than a paradigm shift will do":

Needed:
<http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/d5108f90-abc2-11df-9f02-00144feabdc0.html>  a new
economic paradigm, by By Joseph Stiglitz, Comentary, Financial Times: The
blame game continues over who is responsible for the worst recession since
the Great Depression - the financiers who did such a bad job of managing
risk or the regulators who failed to stop them. But the economics profession
bears more than a little culpability. It provided the models that gave
comfort to regulators that markets could be self-regulated; that they were
efficient and self-correcting. The efficient markets hypothesis ... ruled
the day. Today, not only is our economy in a shambles but so too is the
economic paradigm that predominated in the years before the crisis - or at
least it should be. 

It is hard for non-economists to understand how peculiar the predominant
macroeconomic models were. Many assumed demand had to equal supply - and
that meant there could be no unemployment. (Right now a lot of people are
just enjoying an extra dose of leisure; why they are unhappy is a matter for
psychiatry, not economics.) Many used "representative agent models" - all
individuals were assumed to be identical, and this meant there could be no
meaningful financial markets (who would be lending money to whom?).
Information asymmetries, the cornerstone of modern economics, also had no
place: they could arise only if individuals suffered from acute
schizophrenia, an assumption incompatible with another of the favored
assumptions, full rationality. 

Bad models lead to bad policy: central banks, for instance, focused on the
small economic inefficiencies arising from inflation, to the exclusion of
the far, far greater inefficiencies arising from dysfunctional financial
markets and asset price bubbles. After all, their models said that financial
markets were always efficient. Remarkably, standard macroeconomic models did
not even incorporate adequate analyses of banks...: even a cursory look at
the perverse incentives confronting banks and their managers would have
predicted short-sighted behavior with excessive risk-taking. ...

Fortunately, while much of the mainstream focused on these flawed models,
numerous researchers were engaged in developing alternative approaches. ...
With a few exceptions, most central banks paid little attention to systemic
risk and the risks posed by credit interlinkages. Years before the crisis, a
few researchers focused on these issues, including the possibility of the
bankruptcy cascades that were to play out in such an important way in the
crisis. This is an example of the importance of modeling carefully complex
interactions among economic agents (households, companies, banks) -
interactions that cannot be studied in models in which everyone is assumed
to be the same. Even the sacrosanct assumption of rationality has been
attacked: there are systemic deviations from rationality and consequences
for macroeconomic behavior that need to be explored. 

Changing paradigms is not easy. Too many have invested too much in the wrong
models. Like the Ptolemaic attempts to preserve earth-centric views of the
universe, there will be heroic efforts to add complexities and refinements
to the standard paradigm. The resulting models will be an improvement and
policies based on them may do better, but they too are likely to fail.
Nothing less than a paradigm shift will do. 

But a new paradigm, I believe, is within our grasp... What is at stake, of
course, is more than just the credibility of the economics profession or
that of the policymakers who rely on their ideas: it is the stability and
prosperity of our economies.

  <http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/EconomistsView/~4/_qDSbjSUq2Q> 

 

 

 


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