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Copyright © Hazel Henderson, 2004
(Word Count 1046) The widely-touted, so-called “Nobel
Memorial Prize in Economics” isn’t a proper Nobel Prize
at all. For many years, I and others have sought to correct this widespread
error by reminding people of its actual name: The Bank of Sweden
Prize in Economic Science in Memory of Alfred Nobel. The Bank
set up this $1 million prize in 1969, as I have held, in order to legitimize
the economics profession as a science.
Since then, economists with their claims of knowing how to manage
national economies, have wrought untold damage, from the “shock
treatment” they advocated for Russia to their “Washington
Consensus” formulas for economic growth (free trade, privatization,
floating currencies, opening to global capital flows, etc), which contributed
to financial instabilities and excessive debts. As I pointed out in “G-8
Economists in Retreat” (IPS, June 2003) economics is now being
undermined by new research in many other scientific studies.
Now, in an exclusive interview with me, Peter Nobel, Alfred Nobel’s
descendent, emphasized that “there is no mention in the letters
of Alfred Nobel that he would appreciate a prize for economics. The
Swedish Riksbank, like a cuckoo, has placed its egg in another very
decent bird’s nest. What the Bank did was akin to trademark infringement – unacceptably
robbing the real Nobel Prizes.” Nobel added, “Two thirds
of these prizes in economics have gone to US economists, particularly
of the Chicago School – to people speculating in stock markets
and options. These have nothing to do with Alfred Nobel’s goal
of improving the human condition and our survival – indeed they
are the exact opposite.”
As this years Nobel Prizes were awarded last week,
a number of scientists went public criticizing the mis-labeled “Nobel” Memorial
Prize in Economics” as an embarrassment which is diminishing
the value of all other Nobel Prizes. In an Op-Ed in Sweden’s
main newspaper, Dagens Nyheter, December 10, 2004, Swedish mathematicians,
Mans Lonnroth and Peter Jagers, a member of the Swedish Academy of
Sciences, proposed that the prize in economics should either be broadened
in scope or abolished. They reiterated similar criticisms of the economics
prize by other mathematicians and physicists, because it is often given
to economists who mis-use mathematics to claim that they have optimal
ways of organizing societies. Lonnroth and Jagers cite this year’s
economics prize, which was awarded to Finn E. Kydland and Edward C.
Prescott as typical of this mis-use of mathematics.
Prescott and Kydland’s work in a 1977 paper, describes a
mathematical model which purports to show that this model can be
used for guiding whole economies (and therefore, societies). The
implication is that such political guidance is best left to economists
rather than trusted to elected politicians. The statement of Sweden’s
Royal Academy of Science, which selected Kydland and Prescott,
states that “Already, in their 1977 article, the Laureates …..work
has had a far-reaching impact on reforms carried out in many places
(such as New Zealand, Sweden, Great Britain and the Euro area)
aimed at legislated delegation of monetary policy decisions to
independent central bankers.”
This is exactly what many democratically-elected legislators oppose
.The Swedish Central Bank’s Prize in Economic Science, in
its continuing subtle campaign to legitimate the economics profession
as a “science”, still hopes to portray economics as
politically neutral. It is precisely these claims as a science,
clothed in apparent “value-free” objectivity and mathematical
precision that has given economists their mystique and predominant
role in public policy-making worldwide.
In my Politics of the Solar Age, published in Swedish in 1982
as False Priests, I documented the evolution of the economics profession
and how it came to colonize other disciplines and dominate public
policy in Chapter 8, “Three Hundred Years of Snake Oil”.
I showed how the theories of economists were largely unprovable
hypotheses --- quite different from those in other hard sciences,
which could be empirically verified or refuted. For example, the
equations which guide spaceships to the moon or in constructing
a bridge must be correct. Or the bridge will collapse and the spaceship
self-destruct. On the other hand, economists’ so-called principles
are mere concepts, which often conceal political or social ideologies
behind smokescreens of fancy mathematics.
Other scientists joining the critical mass denouncing the Swedish
Bank Prize include noted physicist, Prof. Dr. Hans Peter Durr,
of the famed Max Planck Institute for Physics, who told me that “economics
is not even bad science, it is incorrect in many of its basic assumptions”.
I had previously asked Prof. Durr “how could such a scandalous
mis-use of other sciences have continued unchallenged for over
40 years?” Durr replied that academic etiquette usually restrained
scholars from other fields from straying into other disciplines,
especially with such criticisms. Austrian physicist, systems theorist
and best-selling author, Fritjof Capra told me that “The
dimension of meaning, purpose, values and conflicts is critical
to social reality. Any model of social organization that does not
include this critical dimension is inadequate. Unfortunately, this
is true for most theoretical models in economics today.”
Mathematician and chaos theorist, Prof. Ralph Abraham at the University
of California, Santa Cruz adds, “The prize in economics should
be broadened in line with the full spectrum of social sciences
to which it belongs and it should be distanced from the Nobel awards,
like the Fields Medals in mathematics.” Yet Peter Nobel maintains
that economics is not a science. Riane Eisler, systems scientist
and author of the best-seller, The Chalice and the Blade, agrees.
Psychologist, David Loye, author of Darwin’s Lost Theory
of Love goes further and shows how Charles Darwin’s great
work was co-opted in Victorian Britain to emphasize “the
survival of the fittest” and justify class divisions and
competition, which Darwin mentioned only briefly. This model of
human nature was adopted by economists as their “rational
economic man” who maximized his self-interest in competition
with all others (still taught in economics). Darwin focused instead
on the evolution of altruism, cooperation, bonding, sharing and
trust as one of the bases of human success (for more, visit
www.thedarwinproject.com)
It seems that a major scientific scandal is emerging, with historians
of science including Robert Nadeau, author of The Non-Local Universe,
and his devastating dismissal of economics as full of assumptions
that have little basis in reality. Stay tuned!
HAZEL HENDERSON, author of Building a Win-Win World
and other books, co-created with the Calvert group of socially-responsible
mutual funds, the Calvert-Henderson Quality of Life Indicators
(updated at
www.Calvert-Henderson.com).
She created the financial TV series, Ethical Marketplace, premiering
on Public Broadcasting stations in the USA in January, 2005.
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