Good one!
Yet I suspect there is a reluctance among the majority of economists to admit that some among them may not be following the scientific method but may instead be making choices on ideological grounds. This is the essence of Romer’s critique, first in his own area of growth economics and then for business cycle analysis. Denying or marginalising the problem simply invites critics to apply to the whole profession a criticism that only applies to a minority.The problem is that this minority is a powerful one and the economics profession is not run democratically but by established and entrenched elites, whether they be "freshwater" or "saltwater."
Mainly Macro
Being honest about ideological influence in economics
Simon Wren-Lewis | Professor of Economics, Oxford University
Being honest about ideological influence in economics
Simon Wren-Lewis | Professor of Economics, Oxford University
I don't agree that there is a "reluctance to admit" ideology.
ReplyDeleteFor that, one would have first to understand the difference between "scientific methods" and "ideological grounds".
Most economists do believe that what they are doing is real science and so they don't see reason to "admit" anything.
This is a problem of blindness, not a problem of honesty. Eocnomists simply are unable to see the problems in their traditinal models.
"This is a problem of blindness, not a problem of honesty."
ReplyDeleteThey haven't been trained correctly....
Yes, they haven't been trained correctly.
DeleteTheir teachers were also blind, that's why.
And the teachers of the teachers also were blind. That's what you have in embryonic "sciences". Maybe physics was like this once.
But today there is crictical thinking and scientific method. Maybe if these subjects were better taught, knowledge would be more advanced... At least people would know they were blind, that's a start...