Economics is lost – it must rediscover life's  values
Current economists' blind belief in  the markets is a worrying departure 
from the values of Keynes and  Schumacher
 
 
_Victoria Chick_ (http://www.guardian.co.uk/profile/victoria-chick)   
_guardian.co.uk_ (http://www.guardian.co.uk/) , Friday 18 November 2011 
 
Recently I had occasion to compare the respective visions of the economists 
 JM Keynes and EF Schumacher for our economic future. They differed on how 
they  thought the economy should develop: Keynes was prepared to carry on as 
usual  until a good standard of living was reached, while Schumacher's 
response to what  he saw as overcapitalised, dehumanising methods of production 
was to propose a  radical transformation of the structure of our economic 
system. But they held  similar values. Both viewed economics as a secondary 
feature of our lives. Both  were concerned with the good life, how it should 
be conceived and how it could  be lived.  
For Keynes, solving the "economic problem" was merely a precondition for  
being able to concentrate on higher values. For Schumacher, work should be 
part  of the good life itself. The cultivation of friendship, the enjoyment of 
the  arts, participation in useful work, caring for others, the pursuit of  
self-fulfillment and enabling the fulfillment of others were examples of 
the  things that really mattered, not the acquisition of goods beyond basic 
needs.  Nor did they support the macroeconomic aim of continual growth in 
material  production. 
Their thinking is in sharp contrast to today's mainstream economists.  
Economics has developed along a single line of thought, in which individuals,  
isolated from society, have "preferences" for a collection of goods and are  
motivated by self-interest to pursue the acquisition, at the lowest prices, 
of  the most goods that their economic circumstances allow. Competing 
businesses,  likewise, pursue maximum profit. Economic theory then "proves" 
that 
"markets"  will establish prices that lead to the most "efficient" allocation 
of scarce  resources. This will maximise growth for the economy as a whole.
 
Mainstream economics claims to be "value-free". Students are cautioned not 
to  mix normative propositions with their "positive" analysis. But 
self-interest is  itself a value. This fact is cleverly disguised by putting 
forward 
the theory of  consumer choice as a uniquely rational response to economic 
information such as  prices, interest rates, tax rates and the like. Any 
behaviour not conforming to  this theory is deemed irrational; other 
motivations 
such as altruism, love, the  greater good or aesthetic appreciation are not 
considered: they are not the  province of economics. 
Such a value system might be just about tolerable if economics were  
restricted to a narrow sphere of inquiry. But over the past few decades  
economics 
has colonised not only much academic inquiry in the social sciences,  but 
also public debate as a whole. Most notably, it has colonised politics. By  
giving "scientific" support to programmes of deregulation and privatisation 
over  the past 40 years, it has managed to transform our economic structures 
to  conform to its ideal of free markets, in the belief that competition 
between  rational consumers and producers would enforce "correct" prices and 
lead to an  economic optimum. 
This theory of how the economy would work if there were free competition 
has  thus been put to the test. The result is what I believe will prove to be 
the  worst economic disruption in the history of the developed world. 
If engineers based their practice on a theory that produced a series of  
collapsed bridges, that theory would get an instant makeover. No one would  
employ engineers to build bridges until they were sure the problem had been  
fixed. But there is not the slightest sign among mainstream economists that  
there is any need for change, nor is there much hesitation among politicians 
to  continue to seek economists' advice. The politicians might have been 
wise to  heed Einstein: "We cannot solve problems using the same mindset that 
created  them." 
It is time that the real economists are recognised: those who know what 
their  values are and put them forward for public debate, not those who pretend 
to a  value-free science and wrap their values in the cloak of a strangely 
limited  form of rationality. The _Harvard  students who walked out of 
Professor Mankiw's lectures_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/education/2011/nov/03/cribsheet-occupy-at-harvard-economics-lecture)
  know this, as did the  French 
students who several years ago _characterised  economics as "autistic"_ 
(http://www.paecon.net/PAEarticles/SocialPolicy.htm) : not being connected to 
the 
real world of economic  problems. 
But it is the _Occupy movement_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/occupy-movement)  that  goes furthest, for, 
however varied its demands have been, its 
underlying  rebellion is against the untrammelled self-interest that has 
brought us to this  pass. What we have is not only an economic crisis but also, 
much deeper, a clash  of values. A sense of the greater good appears to 
have survived and is at last  making itself heard.

-- 
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