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From: Sid Shniad [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, June 28, 2000 5:52 PM
Subject: PURE ECONOMICS, OR THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD?S WITCHCRAFT - Samir
Amin


Samir Amin: "Pure economics is a parascience"

(Final chapter of "Spectres of Capitalism")

PURE ECONOMICS, OR THE CONTEMPORARY WORLD'S WITCHCRAFT

In all the universities of the contemporary world an odd sort of subject is 
taught called economic science, or simply economics, as one might say 
"physics." It would take as its field of study the economic life of a
society, 
with the aspiration of scientifically explaining its crucial magnitudes such

as prices, wages, incomes, rates of interest, foreign exchange rates, and 
total unemployment.

However, and this fact is strange indeed, while scientific research takes 
reality as its point of departure, economics is based on a resolutely anti-
realistic founding principle. This principle, called "methodological 
individualism," treats society as nothing more than the aggregate of its 
component individuals, each of which, as 'Homo oeconomicus', is in turn 
defined in terms of laws expressing what, for it, would be rational 
behavior. It is left rather unclear whether, in the outlook of this
"science," 
the mental structure built on the basis of interaction among these 
behaviors is supposed to give us a picture approximating social reality, 
or whether it is put forward normatively, as a model of an ideal social 
order.

It is a platitude, undeniable as such, that individuals are the basic 
elements of any society. But what reason is there not to take into 
account that real society, far from being built up out of direct encounters 
among individual behaviors, is an infinitely more complex structure 
combining social classes, nations, states, big businesses, collective 
projects, and political and ideological forces. Economists take no notice 
of these obvious realities, because they are hindrances to constructing a 
"pure economics" and revealing its fundamental laws, meaning the laws 
which would follow from an economic structure stripped of any social 
dimension except the interaction of purely individual projects and 
activities. It might at best, perhaps, be an enjoyable mental game to 
make up this pure economics, but is it at all related to reality? Luckily
for 
our health, doctors have not made up a "pure medicine" after the fashion 
of "pure economics." Can one imagine a medical science which models 
the workings of the human body on the exclusive basis of cells, taken to 
be the only fundamental elements of the human body, while deliberately 
taking no notice of bodily organs like the heart or liver? It is about as 
likely that the most complex model, if restricted to interactions among 
cells, would produce anything resembling a human body as it is that the 
random pecking of a pigeon at a keyboard would produce the complete 
works of Shakespeare! The same goes for the likelihood of reaching a 
general equilibrium-and an optimal one no less-by virtue of market 
encounters among five billion human beings.

Taking this absurd starting point as a legitimate one leads to bizarre 
paraphilosophical effusions. Friedrich Von Hayek, who our neoliberal 
economists take as their guru, could not refuse to admit the existence of 
nations, national states, social classes, and a few other aspects of 
reality, but he was quite content to dismiss them as "irrational" residues. 
He thus was glad to set up a mythical rationality in place of the search 
for rational explication of reality.

A human being certainly belongs to the class of rational animals, and its 
behaviors, even the oddest among them, can probably be 
comprehended. But only on the condition that the particular rational 
processes motivating human actions be placed in an appropriate 
framework to specify contextually their scope and their mechanisms. In 
other words, a holistic stance, which bases its reasoning on real totalities

(firms, classes, states), is the only attitude from which science can 
proceed. Classical political economy (and the adjective "political" was not 
there by chance) as practiced by Smith, Ricardo, Marx, and Keynes, 
adopted this scientific attitude as a matter of course.

Furthermore, as an intelligent animal, a human being modifies its 
behavior to take account of the responses it expects from others. 
Accordingly, the models of pure economics ought to be based on the 
rationality requirements not of a simple-minded and immediate response 
(price comes down-I buy more), but of a response mediated by 
expectations of other people's responses (I'll postpone my purchases if I 
think the price will go down even further). Is a model comprising all these 
individual subjective data even possible? And if so, would it go to the 
heart of the problem or would it be beside the point?

Pure economics starts off with musings about the behavior of Robinson 
Crusoe on his island, choosing between consuming now and storing up 
for the future. But its "Robinsonisms" go further. So these economists 
picture the world as made up of five billion Crusoes. Their textbooks start 
with a bizarre opening chapter in which these five billion elemental units 
are presented as "pure consumers," each initially endowed with its own 
"asset basket," each resorting to a perfectly competitive market to get 
things it wishes to have in exchange for possessions superfluous to its 
needs.

This style is manifestly that of a fable, attributing to its animal
characters 
a humanly plausible pattern of behavior in order to reach a typified 
outcome, the "moral of the story." Our pure economics is like that. At 
each stage in the unfolding of its narrative it resorts to whatever 
plausible assumption about behavior will lead to its predetermined 
conclusion.

The conundrum ensuing directly from the choice of methodological 
individualism is this: how can it be proven that interaction among the 
rational behaviors of many individuals, each of which involves 
expectations about all other behaviors, will lead to a determinate 
equilibrium-i.e., a system characterized by one, and only one, set of 
prices, incomes, and unemployment and growth rates? Obviously, this is 
a matter for mathematical techniques.

But this is precisely what mathematics proves is not, in general, the 
case. This sort of system of simultaneous equations (and we are dealing 
here with hundreds of billions of equations) tends strongly, a priori, to be

inconsistent-thus, yielding no solution. With a sufficiently large number 
of additional assumptions it may, just possibly, become consistent but 
indeterminate (yielding an infinite number of solutions), and with a yet 
much larger number of additional assumptions might be made 
determinate (yielding but one solution).

Practitioners of pure economics, accordingly, have the task of finding 
just the right set of assumptions to reach their goal. With that criterion
in 
mind, they decide that some functions aggregating behaviors display as 
convex curves and others as concave, that some production functions 
exhibit diminishing returns and others constant or increasing returns. 
And each step in their demonstration will be bolstered by a suitable 
fable.

The Arrow-Debreu model, that feather in the cap of pure economics, 
does indeed prove that, once all the needed assumptions have been 
made-and, moreover, the system as a whole has been assumed to be 
perfectly competitive-there exists at least one solution yielding general 
equilibrium. However, system-wide perfect competition notoriously 
presumes the existence of a universal auctioneer to consolidate and 
publicize all offers to buy and to sell. Thus, oddly enough, this model 
demonstrates that a central planner, with perfect knowledge of the 
behavioral possibilities of each of his five billion clients, would make all

the decisions needed to produce the sought-after equilibrium! The model 
does not demonstrate that really existing free markets can produce it. At 
least we can get a moment's amusement from the fact that the pure 
economics favored by neoliberal extremists must fall back on Big Brother 
to solve its problems! Obviously, absent the auctioneer, the system is 
constantly changing in accord with the results of the real behavior of 
individuals in the course of their marketplace transactions. Equilibrium, if

it were ever to be reached, would be as much the result of trial and error, 
of gropings-a matter of chance-as of rational factors in the behavior of 
those active in the marketplace. Such an equilibrium will never, in all 
probability, exist. Moreover, Sonnenschein's theorem proves the 
impossibility of deducing the form of supply and demand functions from 
functions specifying the maximizing behavior of the individuals. But what 
does it matter to pure economics that serious mathematicians prove it to 
be stuck in a blind alley? As we will see, a very different question is at 
issue.

Moreover, even assuming the miracle that it would take for general 
equilibrium to result from marketplace encounters among buyers and 
sellers, such an equilibrium would lack essential characteristics-it would 
specify no particular rate of unemployment, no particular growth rate for 
output. True enough, unemployment is no concern of pure economics, 
which presumes a world in which all unemployment is voluntary! This 
definitional presumption being obviously false, conventional economists 
accompany their absurd discourse about the achievement of equilibrium 
merely through the workings of (supposedly self-regulating) markets with 
another dose of nonsense about unemployment, which they arbitrarily, 
and with trite reactionary prejudice, attribute to wages being "too high."
In 
doing so they arrogantly close their eyes not only to the fact that demand 
depends to a substantial degree on wages, but also to the very logic of 
their own system, in which any change in wages alters all the data 
relevant to the system of general equilibrium.

Next comes the claim that such a general equilibrium would also 
represent a "social optimum." This affirmation is the second of pure 
economics's great propositions. But in this case the "proof" rests on a 
meaningless definition of optimality-as the quality of an equilibrium 
none of whose parameters can be changed, even in the slightest, 
without making at least one individual worse off. In other words, an 
equilibrium condemning four billion to stagnant poverty would still be 
"optimal," so long as it could not be altered without costing even a penny 
to the richest billionaire among the five billion inhabitants of our planet!

This splendid structure of pure economics, first envisioned-obviously in 
response to Marxist analysis-toward the close of the nineteenth 
century, systematically disregarded money, which was regarded as 
merely a veil obscuring the real economy. But since, all the same, money 
does exist, the time came when it had to be given a place in that 
structure. The only acceptable way was to adopt the most simple-minded 
form of the quantity theory. In the wake of this move, monetarism-the 
latest style in pure economics-by decreeing that money was just one 
more commodity, authorized the addition of five billion individuals' 
demand schedules for money to their supply and demand schedules for 
other commodities. As for the money supply, it is to be treated as an 
exogenous variable determined by a central bank. An elementary 
scientific analysis of money creation proves that money is not a 
commodity like the others, because its supply is determined by the 
demand for it, which in turn depends partly on interest rates and partly 
on the level of business activity. Moreover, central banks, which are 
supposed to administer the money supply, which they have magical 
powers to set, in a neutral and independent (of whom?) fashion, do not, 
because they cannot, accomplish any such thing. Their action merely 
has a partial and indirect effect on the demand for money through their 
choices about interest rates.

But what is left out is that these choices react back upon the level of 
business activity (through the timing of investment and consumption 
decisions) and thus alter all the data affecting equilibrium levels. By 
rejecting any holistic analysis, and thus ignoring the distinction, useful
in 
this context, between the logic of purely financial strategies and the logic

of productive investment strategies, monetarist pure economics finds 
itself barred from investigating the real causes and factors determining 
interest rates.

That such an absurd and sterile exercise as pure economics should be 
an object of interest to normally intelligent individuals is something to be

wondered at. If anyone had set out to prove that, in the field of social 
thought, a desperate effort to validate vested ideologies, prejudices, and 
interests would extinguish any scientific or critical state of mind, he
could 
have done no better than to invent pure economics.

Pure economics is claimed to be a science on the same level as physics. 
That is scarcely the case, because such a claim denies the specific 
differentia between social and natural sciences. It is blind to the fact
that 
society produces itself rather than being manufactured by external 
forces. However, it belies its own methodological principles by accepting 
the concept of expectations-a concept which proves that the individual, 
supposed to be an objective reality, is really itself an active maker of its

own history.

Pure economics is a parascience. It compares to social science as 
parapsychology compares to psychology. Like any parascience, it can 
be used to demonstrate anything and its opposite. "Tell me what you 
want, and I will make you a model to justify it." Be it desired to raise an 
interest rate from 6.32 percent to 8.45 percent, to cut it to 4.26 percent, 
or to leave it unchanged, at hand will be an ad hoc justification disguised 
as an economic model. Therein lies the strength of pure economics: it is 
a tool in the hands of the dominant capitalists, a screen behind which 
they can hide their actual objectives. Currently, those objectives are to 
worsen unemployment and to skew the distribution of incomes still 
further toward the rich. Since these real aims are unavowable, it 
becomes useful to prove that they are transitional measures leading to 
economic growth, full employment, and jam tomorrow, as the Red 
Queen promised Alice.

Because it is unscientific, economics can enroll amateur mathematicians 
in its service just as parapsychology enrolls some psychologists. 
Because it doesn't matter whether or not what it proves to be the case is 
actually true-what counts is to validate whatever theory is being put 
forward-it likewise doesn't matter whether or not the "proof" is 
mathematically valid. Indeed, it ought to be considered bizarre that this 
"science" gives employment to so many incompetent mathematicians 
who could never hold down a job in a physics lab. There are certainly 
exceptions, like Debreu. But the exceptions are quick to jump out of this 
particular frying pan. Leaving stereotyped pure economics behind, they 
go on to game theory, which analyzes encounters among strategies in 
which the expected reaction of other participants plays an important role. 
This theory certainly has substantial intellectual interest, and it 
furthermore can lead to progress in mathematical technique. Still, I find it

striking that at every step game theory progresses further away from 
social reality. The same goes for the shift of attention toward chaos 
theory. In both cases, any social object of study serves merely as a 
pretext. The real aim is enrichment of mathematical theory, which is not 
only a legitimate objective but, even more so, is one that is essential for 
further progress of knowledge in many fields. Other mathematicians-
like Bernard Guerrien and Giorgio Israel-have performed, precisely 
because they are not amateurish, the indispensable service of proving 
mathematically how absurd and inconsistent is the theory of pure 
economics.

In contrast to these exceptions is silhouetted an army of model builders, 
usually American college teachers, whose career hopes depend on their 
number of published articles which, in general, are both trivial and 
meaningless. Within the ruling class, pure economics is flattering to the 
natural inclinations of engineers and technocrats who believe, usually 
sincerely, that their power is unlimited and that it is their decisions
which 
produce social reality.

The comparison with magic and witchcraft is inescapable. A wizard, 
likewise, dresses up his assertions in a seemingly "scientific" 
phraseology. He gains conviction by including some sensible and 
plausible things in his discourse, but only to bolster conclusions which 
follow from them in no way whatever. In other societies, far removed in 
time from ours, the magician-wizard held the spotlight. The foremost 
wizard was always intelligent enough to know what the king expected of 
him, and he delivered the goods. Pure economics performs similar 
functions in our economically alienated society; moreover, it performs 
them through similar methods, notably by an esoteric terminology (using 
mathematical terms to throw dust in the eyes of non-mathematicians).

Milton Friedman is the wizard-in-chief of our contemporary Oz. He 
understood what they wanted to hear: that wages are always too high 
(even in Bangladesh), that profits are still not high enough to offer the 
affluent sufficient investment incentives, and so on. Hence his success, 
despite his muddleheadedness (he might say anything, and then its 
opposite, depending on who is listening and when) and his proven 
intellectual dishonesty. Those are the very qualities sought in a wizard-
in-chief, worthy of a Nobel Prize.

Moreover, as in witchcraft, cultism flourishes. Lesser wizards cluster 
around their pundits, each of whom furthers the careers of his own 
devotees. I see a similarity, indicative of this aspect of current
intellectual 
fashions, between the proliferation of sects among economists and that 
among organized cults in parascience-parapsychology.

The great statesman uses "pure" economists for his own purposes, just 
as a great king of old chose his own agreeable wizard. Lesser politicians 
believe in pure economics, and the most mediocre among them, who 
often believe in parapsychology as well, even belong to one of pure 
economics' sects.

There is more to be learned about actual society and its economic 
structure in the shabbiest version of functionalist sociology or of vulgar 
Marxism than in the whole inventory of models on the shelves of pure 
economics. Granted that social theories must continually be kept under a 
critical spotlight; that the necessity of attending to what is new in social

reality and to the consequent theoretical revisions is ever-present; that 
this discussion must always be open, free, without preconceptions-
there is one thing of which I am sure, namely that anyone who follows 
the path of pure economics is headed straight for a dead end. That path 
is a blind alley precisely because pure economics is conceived as totally 
ahistorical, blind to every past or present dimension of social reality, 
blind to all possibilities of future evolution. It recognizes only "the 
individual," and as such it is the "pure" fruit of the crudest, most vulgar 
aspects of bourgeois ideology. Its preferred fable is of Crusoe on his 
island-the timeless, placeless, individual human. It is separated from 
the scientific spirit by a full 180 degrees. As to how society reproduces 
itself and is the ground for its own changes, it is certainly not by 
obsession with the interplay among individuals that better answers to 
these questions are to be found.

To the bourgeois economics of his day Marx aptly applied the adjective 
"vulgar." It, and, a fortiori, its distillation "pure economics"-which is 
wrongfully termed "neoclassical" by its acolytes-is exclusively based on 
a single preoccupation, a preoccupation with showing that "the market" 
rules with the force of natural law, producing not merely a "general 
equilibrium" but the best of all possible equilibria, guaranteeing full 
employment in freedom, the "social optimum." And this preoccupation is 
nothing but the expression of a fundamental ideological need, the need 
to legitimize capitalism by making it synonymous with rationality-which, 
in conformity with bourgeois ideology, is seen as nothing more than the 
use of technically rational means for the individual pursuit of mercantile 
profit. On these dubious footings capitalism can be proclaimed "eternal" 
and be portrayed as "the end of history." Of course, economics has not 
merely failed to establish its basic propositions with even the most 
minimal scientific rigor; it has been proven methodologically incapable of 
ever doing so. But what's the difference? The discourse of pure 
economics has no real aim other than to legitimize the unrestricted 
predations of capital.

In contrast to this unscientific discourse, Marxian political economy, in
its 
historical materialist method, is free from any preconception requiring it 
to justify this real ("real" here is to be taken as synonymous with
"actual," 
not "rational") capitalist world. It is Marxian political economy that 
confronts us with the real questions: How at every moment are the 
"equilibria" currently marking the capitalist system determined by the 
class struggle- not only the basic class struggle between labor and 
capital, but also conflicts within the ruling class that set financial
lenders 
against productive investors, entrepreneurs against owners, and 
oligopolists against each other? How do state interventions in fulfillment 
of the political and social logic of the dominant historical coalition 
(alliances among hegemonic classes and social compromises), taken 
together, determine the conditions of possible equilibria- notably 
between Department I (production of means of production) and 
Department II (production of means of consumption), or between these 
two departments and Department III (surplus-absorption)? How do they 
determine the level of employment (not presumed, a priori, to be "full") or 
the structure of relative prices and rents? Or the structure of interest 
rates? Or the pressures from above or below on the general level of 
prices? Or the seeming competitive advantages that govern 
competitiveness on world markets? Marxism puts forward no prior 
assumptions attributing to the system any tendency toward equilibrium. It 
does not hold that class struggles upset any really existing equilibrium, 
or even a really existing, yet provisional, disequilibrium. In sum, Marxist 
political economy is realistic- whereas there is no realism at all about 
pure economics, which abstracts from reality (classes, states, the global 
system) so that its discourse, emptied of reality, is left a mythical fable.

In the history of social thought, pure economics is seldom to be found 
center stage. To the contrary, it is usually confined to a few academic 
nuthouses whilst the social and political world disdainfully ignores it 
except for occasionally lifting, when that serves their purposes, one or 
another of its "conclusions" or "theses." What is required for this 
reactionary utopia to be put in front of the footlights, as has happened in 
our times, is that a set of exceptional circumstances prevail, and that all 
balances of social forces be overturned, leaving capital on top and 
unconstrained. This set of extraordinary circumstances must be very 
temporary, if only because, contrary to what is claimed by that 
reactionary utopianism (a claim that can be summed up in one sentence: 
maximal, unrestrained, unlimited free enterprise will, all by itself, 
guarantee the most wonderful possible social progress!), the 
unconstrained domination of capital can result in nothing but a profound 
social crisis. Pure economics may appear to be an excellent tool for 
crisis management from the perspective of the capitalist group that gains 
from prolongation of the crisis (currently the globalized financial 
markets), but a way out of the crisis it certainly is not. If society is
ever to 
emerge from its crisis, that can only come about through the 
establishment of a new balance of social forces-to be produced by the 
class struggle-in which classes, nations, nation-states, and firms (in 
other words, all the realities to which pure economics is blind) will find 
their appropriate places. Then pure economics will be sent back to its 
academic asylums, not to be heard from again.

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