Doyle Saylor wrote:

> You can't cite transformation then say this.
> The difficulty on lists is not appealing to
> young people but finding the way together.
> Jim and you don't propose how to resolve
> disconnect, or contradiction.  Which while
> not realistic to expect on my part is where
> the tension lies.  Not disagreement.

I humbly admit that my ability to transform myself and others is
pretty limited.  With due respect, I'm not sure I want to follow Jim
to wherever he fancies to shift the subject.

Too ping pongy.  My initial post replied to Gene's remark on economics
being sterile, finance being fruitful and opposite to economics.  Jim
jumped in, taking literal shots at my reply, parsing it paragraph by
paragraph, even taking some paragraphs apart -- thereby missing the
message.  To be sure, a bit of parsing is okay.  Too much parsing
sprays the discussion into all directions.  Some of the issues require
a bigger effort to straighten out than I am willing to make.  I can
give it a try, but at some point I just need to move on.

This morning, when I checked the list archives, I found Gene's
response to my reply and wanted to reflect on it a bit.  It was about
the disconnect in definitions.  I even thought about sharing something
about my background, including the not-so-relevant fact that my
teacher of "modelos matemáticos" back in 1984 was the beautiful wife
(now widow) of the recently diseased actor Sergio Corrieri (Memorias
del Subdesarrollo, etc.).  I couldn't.  Jim's long reply was there.  I
read it and felt I had to address at least some part of it.  So I got
sidetracked.

Anyway, recently, Max made an ironic remark.  This is America and
we're all entitled to our own definitions.  These are limits of our
communication.  Like a bridge, if one side falls, the whole bridge
collapses.  I take my part of that.  Here in the U.S. (New York City),
I've been on and off grad school (2 and then 5 years), professional
practice (4 years), and academia (3 years): 14 years altogether!
Almost half my life dealing with this stuff called "economics" as
understood here and now.  Not in some far away galaxy, in some distant
past, but here and now.

When Gene says "neo-classical" my idea of "neo-classical" doesn't
match his.  (Same with Jim and others on PEN-L.)  Gene seems to think
that "neo-classical" means "static."  That's not my understanding.
More importantly, I'm sure that's not what most regular (not
necessarily progressive) economists today would think of if you say
"neo-classical."  The notion I have is, I believe, the common usage
outside of PEN-L: In macro, "neo-classical" defines a very narrow
group of growth models.  They share a few *postulates*, used to
simplify matters and keep the focus on certain general aspects of the
growth of an economy.  *Per se*, nothing wrong with *that*.  Here's
why:

Take a discrete chunk of software code written ex professo to do a
certain computational task.  Sure, you can assess that piece of code
in terms of its ability to do the task.  But then you need to be
specific about the task.  The task has to be well defined.  And
sufficiently narrow.  You cannot pretend that the task of a discrete
piece of code is to do everything computational -- to solve the
universal problem of computation.  The "solution" to the universal
computational problem is the whole practical evolution of computer
science, software, and hardware in general.

Without specifying the task, you can only judge a discrete piece of
code on the basis of its internal consistency.  Does it have bugs?
Does it crash when you try to compile it?  What corrections to the
code would debug it?  Etc.  Now, if you specify the task, then you can
measure how well it does that job at some expense.  Etc.  Similarly,
you cannot reject the neo-classical model because it's not fully
descriptive of the growth of real economies in their full complexity.
You cannot pull the standard against which to measure the quality of
the code off your hair.

Back to the neo-classical theory, how pivotal are its postulates in
spitting out implications re. the big picture growth behavior of an
economy?  As far as I can see, none of the most fundamental results of
economic theory today requires the "neo-classical" framework.  None.
Let's go over them.  The two big blocks of macro are growth and
business cycles (short-run).  A more detailed list of the blocks
making up conventional micro would include: input-output choice
(technology/cost/profit), consumer choice, duality, inter-temporal
choice, uncertainty/risk, general equilibrium, econometrics, welfare,
externalities, public choice, agency, and mechanism design.  Only
growth and intro to micro reasoning rely (out of convenience, not out
of necessity) on the "neo-classical" assumptions.  All else doesn't
depend on them.  So it doesn't seem right to me to equate conventional
or standard economics with *neo-classical* theory.

To be more specific, in this context, "neo-classical" means that the
production function of the one good in the economy is Cobb-Douglas,
consumption is a fixed fraction of income, and little else.  I mean,
that's drastic.  But, in growth theory, fundamentally the same results
can be derived under more relaxed frameworks, letting consumption be
endogenously determined, etc.  So, the neoclassical assumptions per se
happen to be unnecessary to derive the main conclusions of the most
general growth models (general-equilibrium growth models).

Now, all these models are *dynamic*.  They are growth models.  They
highlight general aspects of the growth of an economy, the effect of
the accumulation of productive assets vis-a-vis technology, etc.
Cannot be static.  What are the boundaries of "neo-classical"
economics according to Gene (or Jim)?  Not clear to me.

The other common reference point here is Marx.  So I often refer to
Marx as well.  Some things lend themselves easily to be cast in Marx's
conceptual framework.  More often than not, the opposite is the case.
In many ways, at least on the strictly economic aspects of it, the
modern framework is more general and flexible than Marx's.  That's
understandable.  Hindsight is 20-20.  Then, keep in mind that
"neo-classical" wasn't around when Marx lived.  Neo-classical,
rational expectations, efficient markets, etc. are conventional terms
in wide use today.  Marx is not.  So we need to adhere to the
conventional definitions (or something close to them) or at least make
explicit what we mean by them.  Otherwise it's two deaf people
screaming at each other.

If I think it helps, I'll discuss things as best I can.
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