New Economic Manifesto s for the Wellbeing

Similar documents
A 13-PART COURSE IN POPULAR ECONOMICS SAMPLE COURSE OUTLINE

1. At the completion of this course, students are expected to: 2. Define and explain the doctrine of Physiocracy and Mercantilism

PAPER No. : Basic Microeconomics MODULE No. : 1, Introduction of Microeconomics

Course Title. Professor. Contact Information

Social Science 1000: Study Questions. Part A: 50% - 50 Minutes

ECON 5060/6060 History of Economic Doctrines

Economics 555 Potential Exam Questions

HOW ECONOMIES GROW AND DEVELOP Macroeconomics In Context (Goodwin, et al.)

George R. Boyer Professor of Economics and ICL ILR School, Cornell University

Why Do We Need Pluralism in Economics?

CRISES and CAPITALIST DEVELOPMENT

BBB3633 Malaysian Economics

Adam Smith and the Development of Capitalism Smith argued the world would be an orderly, better place, with increased prosperity if people followed

2. Scope and Importance of Economics. 2.0 Introduction: Teaching of Economics

ECON 5060/6060 History of Economic Doctrines

A History of Economic Theory

SOCI 423: THEORIES OF SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT

SCHOOLS OF ECONOMICS. Classical, Keynesian, & Monetary

10/7/2013 SCHOOLS OF ECONOMICS. Classical, Keynesian, & Monetary. as Neo- Classical Supply Side Trickle Down Free Trade CLASSICAL THEORY

The Future Direction of Economic Restructuring

SYLLABUS. Economics 555 History of Economic Thought. Office: Bryan Bldg. 458 Fall Procedural Matters

Keynes as an Interpreter of Classical Economics

A BRIEF HISTORY. Artful Approaches to the Dismal Science E RAY CANTERBERY. 2nd Edition. World Scientific. Florida State University, USA

Political Economy. Pierre Boyer and Alessandro Riboni. École Polytechnique - CREST

Define, significance, source [author & title of book/article], example

Syllabus. History of Economic Doctrines. Economics Fall Semester Hours Class: MW 3:00-4:30. Instructor: John Watkins

Classical Political Economy. Week 2 University i of Wollongong

Adam Smith and Government Intervention in the Economy Sima Siami-Namini Graduate Research Assistant and Ph.D. Student Texas Tech University

Capitalism in an Age of Robots

Unit 9 Industrial Revolution

ECONOMIC GROWTH* Chapt er. Key Concepts

Neoliberalism and the SSA Theory of. Long-Run Capital Accumulation

Late pre-classical economics (ca ) Mercantilism (16th 18th centuries) Physiocracy (ca ca. 1789)

Classics of Political Economy POLS 1415 Spring 2013

Economics after the financial crisis: Comments

Overview of the Austrian School theories of capital and business cycles and implications for agent-based modeling

PAPM 1000: Introduction to Public Affairs and Policy Management Winter Term: History of Economic Thought (TENTATIVE OUTLINE)

A Shrinking Universe How Corporate Power Shapes Inequality

Politics of Socio-Economic Development

LECTURE 5: CLASSICAL POLITICAL ECONOMY. Dr. Aidan Regan Website: Twitter: #CapitalUCD

Note Taking Study Guide DAWN OF THE INDUSTRIAL AGE

Industrial Rev Practice

The textbook we will use is History of Economic Theory and Method by Ekelund R.B. and Hebert F.R. (EH) We will draw on a number of other readings.

Unit Three: Thinking Liberally - Diversity and Hegemony in IPE. Dr. Russell Williams

Rethinking critical realism: Labour markets or capitalism?

The Politics of Egalitarian Capitalism; Rethinking the Trade-off between Equality and Efficiency

In a core chapter in their book, Unequal Gains: American Growth. Journal of SUMMER Mark Thornton VOL. 21 N O

Challenges and Opportunities for Colombia s Social Justice and Economy. Joseph E. Stiglitz Bogota February 16, 2017

Human Development and the current economic and social challenges

Rewriting the Rules of the Market Economy to Achieve Shared Prosperity. Joseph E. Stiglitz New York June 2016

A Comparison of the Theories of Joseph Alois Schumpeter and John. Maynard Keynes. Aubrey Poon

Critique of Liberalism Continued: How Free are we REALLY? Irrationality, Institutions, and the Market-Democracy Link

On the Irrelevance of Formal General Equilibrium Analysis

The twelve assumptions of an alter-globalisation strategy 1

PORTRAITS OF FRANCE FRENCH ECONOMICS (PT. I) Yann GIRAUD IEP SGEL

Fall 2013 AP/ECON 4059 A History of Economic Thought I

Economic Theory: How has industrial development changed living and working conditions?

2 Overview of the History of Economic Thought

Political Economy of. Post-Communism

A financial crisis on top of the ecological crisis:

The Politics of Socio-Economic Development

The Wealth of Nations and Economic Growth PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS (ECON 210) BEN VAN KAMMEN, PHD

Subverting the Orthodoxy

INTRODUCTION TO THE HISTORY OF ECONOMIC THOUGHT

EC 454. Lecture 3 Prof. Dr. Durmuş Özdemir Department of Economics Yaşar University

Codes of Ethics for Economists: A Pluralist View* Sheila Dow

Assumptions Critiques Key Persons 1980s, rise after Cold War Focus on human in world affairs. Neo-Realism

Sociological Theory II SOS3506 Erling Berge. Introduction (Venue: Room D108 on 31 Jan 2008, 12:15) NTNU, Trondheim. Spring 2008.

Oxfam Education

Globalization & the Battle of Ideas. Economic Theory and Practice in the 20 th Century

The Restoration of Welfare Economics

Quotes from The Economic Consequences of Peace - (1920)

Introducing a New Economics

The Reformation in Economics

Robust Political Economy. Classical Liberalism and the Future of Public Policy

For a Universal Declaration of Democracy

DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS. Economics 3214

Economists as Worldly Philosophers

PHILOSOPHY OF ECONOMICS & POLITICS

Geopolitical Economy: After US Hegemony, Globalization and Empire. The Future of World Capitalism

Laissez-Faire vs. Socialism Who is responsible?

GENERAL INTRODUCTION FIRST DRAFT. In 1933 Michael Kalecki, a young self-taught economist, published in

Econ Global Inequality and Growth. Introduction. Gabriel Zucman

PSCI 300: Foundations of Political Economy Winter, 2018 RCH 308, Wednesdays 2:30-5:20pm

LECTURE 1/2: THE GLOBAL POLITICAL ECONOMY OF CAPITALISM

Growth in Open Economies, Schumpeterian Models

The Industrial Revolution. A new era in human history

Towards a New Paradigm for Economics Asad Zaman, JKAU, Vol. 18 No. 2, (2005).

Types of Economies. 10x10learning.com

The End of Mass Homeownership? Housing Career Diversification and Inequality in Europe R.I.M. Arundel

Karl Marx ( )

Globalization and Shifting World Power

Functions of institutions X-institutions Y-institutions. ownership. Redistribution (accumulationconcordance-distribution)

World History Chapter 25

Sociology 120 Fall 2018 ECONOMY AND SOCIETY. Course Description

Comparative Advantage : The Advantage of the Comparatively Powerful? J. Bradford DeLong Last edited:

Marx (cont.), Market Socialism

POLI 359 Public Policy Making

Sustainability and Political Economy

Chinese Economic Reform from an International Perspective

Transcription:

New Economic Manifesto s for the Wellbeing of All Rasigan Maharajh An Alternative @ Rio+20: Peoples Sustainability Treaties & the Manifesto 18 th October 2012, Ramapo College.

Outline of Presentation 1. Introduction 2. Conventional Economics 3. Contemporary Paradoxes 4. Towards Manifestos

What is the Economy, Anyway? The economy is the sum total of the work we must perform to produce the goods and services we need to survive and live Without work (broadly defined as productive human effort ), nothing happens in the economy

GDP: Use With Caution GDP should never be used as the measure of economic well-being or progress : Does not include work that is not performed for money (such as Home-based Care, and Community Volunteering) Does not consider the distribution of output ( average per capita GDP says little about how most people live) Does not consider whether output is useful or destructive (child care versus warfare) GDP is relevant, but be careful how we use it Never assume higher GDP is automatically good

The Politics of Economics There is no objective truth in economics Economic theory has always tried to keep up with changes in the economy Economic debates have always reflected realworld conflicts and struggles Economics today is used to defend the system Joan Robinson: The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists

Economists over Time 1400 1700 s Mercantilists states & merchants 1750 1776 Physiocrats laissez-faire, laissez-passer 1723 1790 Adam Smith markets & macroeconomics 1772 1823 David Ricardo rents & taxes 1776-1834 Thomas Malthus population & growth 1818 1883 Karl Marx capital & revolution 1835 1882 William Stanley Jevons theory of political economics 1834 1919 Leon Walras pure economics 1842 1924 Alfred Marshal principles of economics 1883 1946 John Maynard Keynes welfare & public works 1886 1964 Karl Polanyi social system determinism 1883-1950 Joseph Schumpeter business cycles and creative destruction 1930 - Richard Nelson Evolutionary Economics 1938 - Michel Aglietta Régulation Theory

The History of Economics Paralleling the evolution of the economy, economics also constantly evolves But economics is not a neutral science Economic theories and ideas always incorporate values and ideologies They all aim to criticise or justify particular economic arrangements, not just explain them And economics responds to the problems and controversies experienced in the economy

Axioms of Léon Walras model of general equilibrium The economic universe is determinate It exists in a void rather than in an ecosystem All relations in an economy are self-regulating, in the sense that any disturbance sets in motion forces tending to restore the balance These forces result exclusively from the behaviour of isolated individual agents The behaviour of these agents conforms to certain mathematical properties consumer choice is characterised by transitivity (if X is preferred to Y and Y to Z, then X is always preferred to Z), completeness (out of the set of all possible bundles of goods given her income, she considers her preference between every pair of them) and independence (consumers are not influenced by the choices of other consumers) wwwpaeconnet

Market-based Rationality Rational economic behaviour of individuals in a market setting creates the structure of social institutions the legal system, property rights, family and kinship relations and all other social institutions leading to optimal solutions of human and social problems

Financialisation of the economy attempts to reduce all value that is exchanged whether tangible, intangible, future or present promises, either into a financial instrument or a derivative of a financial instrument the increasing importance of financial markets, financial motives, financial institutions, and financial elites in the operation of the economy and its governing institutions (Gerald Epstein: University of Massachusetts) transformation of future streams of income (from profits, dividends, or interest payments) into a tradable asset like a stock or a bond (Ramaa Vasudevan: Dollars & Sense) Growing divergence between the real (productive) and financial economies Rising economic and political power of rentiers those whose earnings come from financial activities and from forms of income arising from ownership claims (such as interest, rent, dividends, or capital gains) rather than from actual production Rapid expansion of consumer credit Rising inequality Asset Bubbles Stagnant wages

Understanding Neoliberalism Multi-dimensional effort to restore business power Economic, political, and cultural power Response to problems of the late Golden Age: Inflation Worker militancy Falling profits National liberation Two clear cannon shots signalled new era: Economic governance: Volcker shock, interest rates Political governance: Thatcher, Reagan Neoliberalism is NOT equivalent to shrinking the state Rather, it redirects policy & power to aid business

Key Goals of Neoliberalism Reduce and control inflation; protect the value of financial wealth Restore insecurity and discipline to labour markets Eliminate entitlements ; force families to fend for themselves Roll back and refocus government activities to meet business needs; cut taxes Generally restore the economic and social dominance of private business and wealth Claw back expectations; foster a sense of resignation to insecurity and hardship

Key Tools of Neoliberalism Use interest rates aggressively to regulate inflation and control labour markets Privatize and deregulate more industries Scale back social security programs (especially for working-age adults) Deregulate labour markets (including attacks on unions) Use free-trade agreements to expand markets and constrain government interventions

Contemporary Practices The forms of accounting associated with macroeconomic management -- which arose out of a colonial and immediately post-colonial political experience -- do not provide a more accurate understanding of a pre-existing world, but just set up new practices in new places whose ostensible ambitions come to grief again and again. Lohmann (2002)

Change the system, not just the boundaries 2000 French Students Post-Autistic Economics Cambridge & Oxford Post-Autistic Economics Review wwwpaeconnet 2001 Kansas City Proposal Cultural, social, political, moral & historical neglect

Heterodox Economics Pluralistic Inter-disciplinary Policy-oriented Starting with the real world Challenging the status quo (2010) 100 Words on Heterodox Economics, Heterodox Economics Newsletter, Issue 100, 31 May

Post-Autistic Economics AGAINST: uncontrolled use of economics treatment of mathematics as an end in itself = autistic science repressive domination of neoclassical theory derivative approaches in the curriculum dogmatic teaching style no place for critical and reflective thought FAVOURS: engagement with empirical and concrete economic realities prioritising science over scientism a pluralism of approaches adapted to the complexity of economic objects and to the uncertainty surrounding most of the big economics questions initiating reforms to rescue economics from its autistic and socially irresponsible state http://wwwpaeconnet

Jevons Paradox Improvements in steam engines that decreased the use of coal per unit of output also served to increase the scale of production as more and bigger factories were built Hence, increased efficiency in the use of coal had the paradoxical effect of expanding aggregate coal consumption William Stanley Jevons (1865) The Coal Question

Quality of Growth It is rapidly becoming clear that the dominant paradigm of economic growth is one of the most significant obstacles to a serious global effort to deal with climate change But this destabilizing, fundamentalist growth-consumption paradigm is itself more effect rather than cause The central problem, it is becoming increasingly clear, is a mode of production whose main dynamic is the transformation of living nature into dead commodities, creating tremendous waste in the process The driver of this process is consumption or more appropriately overconsumption and the motivation is profit or capital accumulation: capitalism, in short Walden Bello (2008) Will Capitalism Survive Climate Change? in Bangkok Post, March 29 (Professor of Sociology at the University of the Philippines)

Growth & Crisis the need for higher profits and endless growth has intensified environmental destruction, resource depletion, instability, social and political inequality, and even global warming These problems have become systemic and solutions therefore require long-term systemic change Joel Magnuson (2008)

Campaign Contradictions True Prices: strive for a sustainable global economy in which all social and environmental damage is reflected in prices. Commons: right to subsistence nature as interlocutor Commons are not resources Makes possible new forms of accumulation that treat commons and commoners as free gifts! Adapted from: Green Economy Colloquium (2012)

Heterodox Challenge What is harder, but absolutely necessary, is to develop a real alternative a practical, living, developing political economy, devoted to the committed analysis of social and economic problems, challenging the existing capitalist system and its ideology, forming an integral part of our political practice Frederic Lee (2001)

Towards New Economics Manifestos And it ought to be remembered that there is nothing more difficult to take in hand, more perilous to conduct, or more uncertain in its success, than to take the lead in the introduction of a new order of things. The innovator has for enemies all those who have done well under the old conditions, and lukewarm defenders in those who may do well under the new. Niccolò Machiavelli (1515)

Remember not to Forget "I don't care who writes a nation's laws -- or crafts its advanced treaties -- if I can write its economics textbooks" Paul Samuelson quoted in Skousen (1997)

Thank you, r rasigan@ieri.org.za

References Green Economy Colloquium (2012) The Green Economy: Is Internalizing Externalities Really a Way Forward?, The Hague, 2 October. Lee, Frederic (2001) CSE and Heterodox Economics, Capital & Class, Number 75 Lohmann, Larry (2002) What Next? Activism, Expertise, Commons, Dag Hammarskjold Foundation. Machiavelli, Niccolò (1515) The Prince. Magnuson, Joel (2008) Mindful Economics: How the US Economy Works, Why It Matters, and How It Could Be Different, Seven Stories Press, New York Stanford, J. (2008) Economics for Everyone: A Short Guide to the Economics of Capitalism, Pluto, London. Skousen, Mark (1997) "The Perseverance of Paul Samuelson's Economics", Journal of Economic Perspectives 11 (2): 137 152.