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© Hazel Henderson, June 2003
www.hazelhenderson.com
(885 words)
G8 ECONOMISTS IN RETREAT
The G8 Summit is no longer just about economics. The
economics profession still bestrides national policy, as it has since
the Great Depression. The activist pump-priming theories of UK
mathematician John Maynard Keynes helped create the New Deal debates in
the USA. During World War II economists devised the familiar Gross
National Product (GNP) and its narrower domestic version, Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) to measure war production. GNP/GDP and its rate of growth
dominate G8 summits and became the Holy Grail of politicians worldwide.
Armies of economists descended on government agencies to dispense advice
on growth and how to run their affairs from education, health, welfare
and pensions to trade and military policies.
Defrocking economists, as I have over the years, is
getting easier. G8 leaders puzzled over conflicting advice on deflation
– while many other issues – from AIDS to terrorism – are beyond the
competence of economists. The economists’ tool kit promised universal
applicability, with its models of rational human actors and elegant
theorems based on general equilibrium of supply and demand, efficient
allocation of resources – all revealed in prices. This tool kit
undergirds the economic development prescriptions of the Washington
Consensus.
As the world got more complex, interdependent and human
activities began stressing Nature’s resources, economists kept ahead of
their critics and rivals from other disciplines (political science,
sociology, psychology, anthropology, ecology, thermodynamics, systems
and chaos theory). Economists took theories and insights from all these
rivals whom they had supplanted in public policy.
Economists’ imperialism expanded to “capture for our
profession”, as a UK-based economics society put it, the issues of
global warming and climate change. After the Central Bank of Sweden
successfully lobbied the Alfred Nobel Prize Committee into setting up a
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economics (economics is not a science) there was
no stopping the ambitions of this discipline. Hyphenated societies of
ecological economists, social-economists, political-economists,
health-economists, labor-economists, behavioral-economists and
evolutionary-economists tell this story of intellectual colonialism.
Economists trump other disciplines in academia too.
Their departments and business schools receive the lion’s share of
funds, research contracts, power and prestige. Economics is politics in
disguise. Cost-benefit analysis or a carefully crafted economic impact
statement can squelch any government reform or new social or
environmental initiative. Such analyses emphasize the costs of change to
existing interests, while ignoring or downplaying the current costs of
the status quo on other actors, the environment or future generations.
Cost-benefit analyses average out costs and benefits so as to obscure
who are the winners and who the losers of a proposed policy – while
confusing the general public into believing that the issue is
“technical” rather than political.
Today, the chinks in economists’ armor are becoming
widely evident – as has the game of preempting the work in other
disciplines. Psychologists won recent Nobel Memorial Prizes in Economics
for challenging simplistic economic models of human behavior. Even
Harvard University may soon allow a new course in its economics
department that challenges the orthodoxies still undergirding the
policies of the IMF and the decisions of Wall Street and the world’s
bourses.
Economists borrowing from psychologists and real world
observation now admit that we humans are not always competitively
maximizing our own self-interest – the standard economic view of homo
economicus. Many people enjoy giving as well as receiving, care
about what kind of world we are leaving our children – “irrational”
behavior to an economist. No wonder economics is called “dismal.” As
London-based, The Economist, points out, this re-think undermines
orthodoxy in such major policy areas as free trade, taxes, school
vouchers, as well as globalization and the environment.
The deepest challenges are those I outlined in The
Politics of the Solar Age (1981, 1988) on economics’ inability to
deal with technological change (because it views technology as given)
and its ignorance of the laws of thermodynamics. In addition, today,
neuroscientists are disproving the old homo economicus model by
showing that human behavior tends toward trust and cooperation. This
challenges game theorist, Nobelist John Nash’s famous equilibrium, which
“predicts” that in economic transactions between strangers predicting
each other’s responses – that the optimal level of trust is zero! Now
researcher Paul Zak at Claremont University, California, has linked
trust in humans to the reproduction hormone oxytocin, which induces
uterine contractions, lactation and female bonding with offspring, and
pro-social human behavior.
Economics was always based on patriarchal values –
ignoring the work of women in child rearing, caring for the old,
community volunteering as “uneconomic” in GNP. Economics did not predict
the rise of socially-responsible investing (now at $2.3 trillion in the
USA alone). Nor did “inflation-hawk” economists foresee the new threat
of worldwide deflation. Their NAIRU (non accelerating inflation rate of
unemployment) model caused central banks to disemploy millions with
higher-than-necessary interest rates.
Economists are learning some humility – admitting that
they have no theories on the process of economic development either.
Developing country leaders can now re-invite doctors, psychologists and
all the other banished specialists back into public policy. Brasil’s
finance minister Palocci is an MD and Brasil will host an
interdisciplinary conference (October 26) on Implementing the New
Indicators of Sustainability to redefine progress and prosperity.
Inter-disciplinary experts will compare all these new ways of measuring
human development, well-being and quality of life. As we witness the
debacles in Asia, Russia, Argentina, economist-ridden governments
clearly need no longer defer to these defrocked priests.
****
Hazel Henderson is
author of Beyond Globalization, Building a Win-Win World and
other books (see www.hazelhenderson.com) and co-developer of the
Calvert-Henderson Quality of Life Indicators (updates at
www.calvert-henderson.com,
click on Foreword).