from SLATE:
Don’t Let Economists and Politicians Hack Your Math

Of course kids need to learn algebra.

By Edward Frenkel | Posted Friday, Feb. 8, 2013, at 2:14 PM ET


Imagine a world in which it is possible for an elite group of hackers
to install a “backdoor” not on a personal computer but on the entire
U.S. economy. Imagine that they can use it to cryptically raise taxes
and slash social benefits at will. Such a scenario may sound
far-fetched, but replace “backdoor” with the Consumer Price Index
(CPI), and you get a pretty accurate picture of how this arcane
economics statistic has been used.


Tax brackets, Social Security, Medicare, and various indexed payments,
together affecting tens of millions of Americans, are pegged to the
CPI as a measure of inflation. The fiscal cliff deal that the White
House and Congress reached a month ago was almost derailed by a
proposal to change the formula for the CPI, which Matthew Yglesias
characterized as “a sneaky plan to cut Social Security and raise taxes
by changing how inflation is calculated.” That plan was scrapped at
the last minute. But what most people don’t realize is that something
similar had already happened in the past. A new book, The Physics of
Wall Street by James Weatherall, tells that story: In 1996, five
economists, known as the Boskin Commission, were tasked with saving
the government $1 trillion. They observed that if the CPI were lowered
by 1.1 percent, then a $1 trillion could indeed be saved over the
coming decade. So what did they do? They proposed a way to alter the
formula that would lower the CPI by exactly that amount!


This raises a question: Is economics being used as science or as
after-the-fact justification, much like economic statistics were
manipulated in the Soviet Union? More importantly, is anyone paying
attention? Are we willing to give government agents a free hand to
keep changing this all-important formula whenever it suits their
political needs, simply because they think we won’t get the math?

Ironically, in a recent op-ed in the New York Times, social scientist
Andrew Hacker suggested eliminating algebra from the school curriculum
as an “onerous stumbling block,” and instead teaching students “how
the Consumer Price Index is computed.” What seems to be completely
lost on Hacker and authors of similar proposals is that the
calculation of the CPI, as well as other evidence-based statistics, is
in fact a difficult mathematical problem, which requires deep
knowledge of all major branches of mathematics including … advanced
algebra.


Whether we like it or not, calculating CPI necessarily involves some
abstract, arcane body of math. If there were only one item being
consumed, then we could easily measure inflation by dividing the unit
price of this item today by the unit price a year ago. But if there
are two or more items, then knowing their prices is not sufficient. We
also need to know the levels of consumption today and a year ago;
economists call these “baskets.” Of course, we can easily find a
typical consumer’s expenditure today by multiplying today’s
consumption levels by the current prices and adding them up. But to
what number from a year ago should we compare it? If the consumption
levels were static, we would compute last year’s expenditure by
multiplying the same consumption levels by last year’s prices and
adding them up. We would then be able to measure inflation by dividing
this year’s expenditure by last year’s. But consumption tends to
change—in part because our tastes change, but also in response to
price variations. The inflation index must account for this, so we
have to find a way to compare the baskets today and a year ago. This
turns out to be a hard mathematical problem that has perplexed
economists for more than a century and still hasn’t been completely
solved. But even to begin talking about this problem, we need a
language that would enable us to operate with symbolic quantities
representing baskets and prices—and that’s the language of algebra!


In fact, we need much more than that. As Weatherall explains in his
book, to implement a true cost-of-living index [sic]*, one actually
has to use the so-called “gauge theory.” This mathematics is at the
foundation of a unified physical theory of three forces of nature:
electromagnetism, the strong nuclear force, and the weak nuclear
force. (Many Nobel Prizes have been awarded for the development of
this unified theory; it was also used to predict the Higgs boson, the
elusive elementary particle recently discovered at the Large Hadron
Collider under Geneva.) The fact that gauge theory also underlies
economics was a groundbreaking discovery made by the economist Pia
Malaney and mathematical physicist Eric Weinstein around the time of
the Boskin Commission. Malaney, who was at the time an economics Ph.D.
student at Harvard, tried to convey the importance of this theory for
the index problem to the Harvard professor Dale Jorgenson, one of the
members of the Boskin Commission, but to no avail. In fact, Jorgenson
responded by throwing her out of his office. Only recently, George
Soros’ Institute for New Economic Thinking finally gave Malaney and
Weinstein long overdue recognition and is supporting their research.
But their work still remains largely ignored by economists.


So that’s where we find ourselves today: Politicians are still eager
to exploit backdoor mathematical formulas for their political needs,
economists are still willing to play along, and no one seems to care
about finding a scientifically sound solution to the inflation index
problem using adequate mathematics. And the public—well, very few
people are paying attention. And if we follow Hacker’s prescriptions
and further dumb down our math education, there won’t be anyone left
to understand what’s happening behind closed doors. [except those
folks who live in countries with good school systems, of course.]


Irrespective of one’s political orientation, one thing should be
clear: In this brave new world, in which formulas and equations play a
much bigger role than ever before, our ignorance of mathematics is
being abused by the powers that be, and this will continue until we
start taking math seriously for what it is: a powerful weapon that can
be used for good and for ill.


Alas, instead of recognizing this new reality, we keep giving forum to
paragons of mathematical illiteracy.


In his book, Weatherall made an admirable effort to start a serious
conversation about the need for a new mathematical theory of the CPI.
But guess who reviewed this book in the New York Review of Books?
Andrew “we don’t need no algebra” Hacker! There is nothing wrong with
healthy debate; it can only be encouraged. But something is wrong when
an opinionated individual who has demonstrated total ignorance of a
subject matter gets called on over and over again as an expert on that
subject.


We have to break this vicious circle. As Richard Feynman eloquently
said, “People who wish to analyze nature without using mathematics
must settle for a reduced understanding.” Now is the time not to
reduce math curriculum at schools, but to expand it, taking advantage
of new tools in education: computers, iPads, the wider dissemination
of knowledge through the Internet. Kids become computer literate much
earlier these days, and they can now learn mathematical concepts
faster and more efficiently than any previous generation. But they
have to be pointed in the right direction by teachers who inspire them
to think big. This can only be achieved if math is not treated as a
chore and teachers are not forced to spend countless hours in
preparation for standardized tests. Math professionals also have a
role to play: Schools should invite them to help teachers unlock the
infinite possibilities of mathematics to students, to show how a
mathematical formula can be useful in the real world and also be
elegant and beautiful, like a painting, a poem, or a piece of music.


Working together, we should implement the 21st century version of the
Second Amendment: Everyone shall have the right to bear “mathematical
arms”—to possess mathematical knowledge and tools needed to protect us
from arbitrary decisions by the powerful few in the increasingly
math-driven world. So that the next time someone wants to alter a
formula that affects us all, we won’t be afraid to ask: “Wait a
minute, what does this formula mean and why are you changing it?”

* even if the CPI is measured "correctly" (as this author defines it),
it would leave out non-market elements of the true "cost of living."

-- 
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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