This review is not particularly in itself.  It is worth skimming to get 
the flavor.  Once you feel comfortable with what you have read, search 
for the word "ugly."  The idea is that these mostly neoliberal 
economists claim to have created enormous value for the economy.  I 
assume that the essays were composed before the crash, but the editor 
claims that our profession deserves extra funding for all the value it 
created.  Could the public demand a clawback to penalize these 
economists for the harm they have done?


Better Living through Economics
Posted Thu, 2010-08-12 09:44 by whaples
Author:
Siegfried, John J.
Reviewer:
Vedder, Richard

Published by EH.NET (August 2010)

http://eh.net/book_reviews/better-living-through-economics

John J. Siegfried, editor, Better Living through Economics. Cambridge, 
MA: Harvard University Press, 2010. viii + 315 pp. $45 (hardcover), 
ISBN: 978-0-674-03618-5.

Reviewed for EH.Net by Richard Vedder, Department of Economics, Ohio 
University.



This volume of essays advances the proposition that economic theory and 
economic research can and has been harnessed to promote human welfare in 
many different ways, materially improving the quality of our lives and 
arguably our incomes. Not unusual for compilations of essays, this book 
contains the good, the bad, and, unfortunately, the ugly. Fortunately, 
“the good” dominates, and I would say two-thirds of the volume 
successfully achieves its mission.

John Siegfried, Vanderbilt professor and Secretary-Treasurer of the 
American Economic Association, seems to be the prime mover on getting 
this volume published.  As Richard Caves states in a cover blurb, many 
of the “essays are concise, clear and consistently written at a level 
within the reach of undergraduate economics students.” Good examples 
include Thomas Tietenberg’s excellent treatment of the evolution of 
emissions trading to more efficiently deal with restricting 
environmentally undesirable practices, Elizabeth Bailey’s nice narrative 
about the benefits of transportation deregulation beginning in the late 
1970s, Robert Moffitt’s clear and well balanced discussion of the 
evolution of the Earned Income Tax Credit, Michael Boskin’s discussion 
of improvements in measuring inflation, Lawrence White’s analysis of 
changing views on anti-trust regulation over time, and the Asch, Miller 
and Warner’s discussion of how the military draft was ended and 
subsequent issues arising from that.  Each of these authors shows that 
basic propositions taught in any good principles of economics course can 
be harnessed to make the world work better and more efficiently. 
Generally speaking, the discipline and self-correcting properties of 
markets are stronger and more effective in allocating resources than 
rules-based command decisions made through the political process. Also, 
aligning incentives with socially desirable objectives pays.

Anne Krueger’s essay stands out in several respects. First, she very 
convincingly demonstrates that the move away from protectionist/import 
substitution policies in the 1950s and 1960s harnessed the spirit of 
enterprise and brought about enormous improvements in the standard of 
living for literally billions of people. And she appropriately notes 
that the underlying theory was not discovered by an National Science 
Foundation grant revealing huge insights, but essentially by the work of 
Adam Smith and David Ricardo a couple of centuries ago.

This gets to a problem. Economists sometimes get overwhelmed with their 
own self importance and claim more than they should. John Taylor writes 
a generally solid essay arguing that reductions in macroeconomic 
stability in modern times reflects in large part a move to a more 
intelligent understanding on the role of monetary variables in the 
economy. Taylor believes the evolution of new economic modeling in 
recent decades that combine rational expectations with some allowance 
for price stickiness has brought about enormous policy improvements. 
Maybe, but I side with commenter Laurence H. Meyer (himself a former 
Federal Reserve Governor) whose views are “the shifts in monetary policy 
... are due more to the rediscovery of classical monetary theory than to 
advances of modern macroeconomic theory. ... classical monetary 
theorists had the story basically right” (p. 165).  The work of Milton 
Friedman outlined a half century ago -- itself informed by still earlier 
work of quantity theorists and neglected practitioners like Clark 
Warburton -- was far more important than modern-day theoretical refinements.

The less good essays stray a good deal from the stated mission of 
offering clear, concise explanations of using economics to deal with 
problems in a language an undergraduate student can understand. Alvin 
Roth’s paper on deferred-acceptance algorithms is filled with jargon, is 
exceedingly hard to follow, and deals, frankly, with a far less dramatic 
advancement in modern economics than improving price indices, promoting 
the power of comparative advantage, or the gains from transport 
deregulation.  Modest Roth is not -- he cites nearly thirty papers he 
authored or coauthored in the bibliography.  The McAfee, McMillan and 
Wilkie piece on auctioning spectrum licenses deals with a moderately 
more important topic, but again gets into too many details of 
alternative bidding possibilities to be of interest to all but the most 
gung ho specialists.

Alas, I must come to the “ugly” part of this book. This appears to be 
not simply a volume of essays to promote the practical dimensions of 
modern advances in economics, but more an effort to increase the income 
and prestige of economists relative to other scholars.  On page one John 
Siegfried assets, without a scintilla of supporting evidence, that “the 
value of the improved policies documented in this volume is likely 
hundreds of billions of dollars.”  His agenda becomes clearer very 
shortly: “Interestingly ... only a few of the contributions outlined 
here have been financed or promoted through the private sector” (p. 3). 
  In other words, NSF economics grants have a huge payoff.  Charles 
Plott even goes further: “the social value of the contributions of 
economics compares well with the contributions of basic research in any 
field of science.” (p. 6).  This, of course, is a normative judgment 
without a scintilla of rigorous proof, measuring, for example, the rate 
of return on research in physics or biological sciences with that in 
economics or psychology (a point that even the NSF’s Daniel Newlon 
gently takes him to task on).

All and all, this reinforces my own feelings about our profession. For 
many, Physics Envy is a big cross to bear -- the unwillingness to accept 
that economics is not considered as respectable as many of the so-called 
hard sciences.  This volume promotes the good economists have done, 
ignoring the policy disasters that economists have contributed to, for 
example, the stagflation of the 1970s, or, arguably, even the financial 
crisis of 2008 -- where were economists in warning about subprime 
lending, excessive use of untried to financial instruments, etc? Where 
are we today in opposing stimulus packages that historical experience 
and economic theory alike say do not work?

But above all, the volume is all about rent-seeking -- a plea to get 
more economics funding for the NSF and related agencies. It is amazing 
how much Adam Smith, David Ricardo, A.C. Pigou, Irving Fisher and Milton 
Friedman contributed to the advancement of human welfare without NSF 
funds. As Austen Goolsbee notes in a recent NBER working paper, more 
government grant funding inevitably increases economic rents because of 
the inherent short-term limits on the supply of good talent. If the 
authors had stuck to presenting the evidence without its obvious and 
overplayed commercial message, this would have been a far better volume.


-- 
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA
95929

530 898 5321
fax 530 898 5901
http://michaelperelman.wordpress.com
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