EXCLUSIVE TO LEMONDE DIPLOMATIQUE
© Hazel Henderson, December 2004
www.hazelhenderson.com
(word count 1,367)
"THE "NOBEL" PRIZE THAT WASN'T"
by
Hazel Henderson
An unusual row
erupted at the recent annual Nobel Prize awards. Peter Nobel, heir
of Alfred Nobel, who endowed the Prizes added his voice to the
growing outrage of many scientists at the confusion over The Bank of
Sweden Prize in Economic Science in Memory of Alfred Nobel. Over
the years since this $1 million prize was set up by Sweden’s central
bank in 1969, it has become conflated with the real Nobel Prizes and
is now often mis-labeled as the so-called “Nobel Memorial Prize.”
The brouhaha
emerged December 10th, 2004 in Sweden’s main newspaper,
Dagens Nyheter in an extensive Op-Ed by mathematician and
member of Sweden’s Royal Academy of Sciences, Peter Jager, Mans
Lonnroth, Senior Lecturer in Technology and Society and former
Environment minister and Johan Lonnroth, economist and a former
member of the Swedish Parliament. The article pointed out in great
detail how many economists including those who had been awarded the
Bank of Sweden Prize – actually mis-used mathematics by creating
unrealistic models of social processes. Peter Nobel, in an
exclusive interview, told me that Alfred Nobel had never mentioned
in any of his letters a prize in economics. Nobel added “The
Swedish Riksbank has put an egg in another very decent bird’s nest
and thereby infringed on the trademarked name of Nobel. Two thirds
of the Bank’s prizes in economics have gone to US economists of the
Chicago School who create mathematical models to speculate in stock
markets and options – the very opposite of the purposes of Alfred
Nobel to improve the human condition.”
What appeared to
be the last straw, which caused these objections to finally surface,
was this latest award of the Bank of Sweden Prize to two more US
economists, Finn E. Kydland and Edward C. Prescott. Cited was their
1977 paper describing their mathematical model which purports to
prove that central banks should be independent of the influence of
elected legislators – even in democracies. This has been an
ideological drumbeat of central bankers, commercial banks,
neoclassical economists and financial journals, including
London-based The Economist. Witness the citation that went
with this year’s Bank of Sweden Prize, which lauded Kydland and
Prescott’s paper as having “had a far-reaching impact on reforms
carried out in many places (such as New Zealand, Sweden, Great
Britain and in the Euro area) aimed at legislated delegation of
monetary policy decisions to independent central bankers.”
These dubious
“reforms” are precisely the problem for popularly-elected
representatives in democracies, where transparency in policy
decisions is highly valued. Monetary policy is at the heart of how
wealth, income and opportunities are distributed in societies. An
excessively tight monetary policy for example, falls heavily on
workers as unemployment rises, while many small borrowers of car and
home loans bear the brunt of high interest rates. Lenders and those
with capital assets do well.
In my Politics
of the Solar Age (1981, 1986), I documented the ideological
biases of neoclassical economics and the unreality of many of the
inaccurate assumptions underlying even today’s economics textbooks.
A new chorus of scientists in physics, mathematics, neurosciences
and ecology are now joining their Swedish colleagues in calling for
the Bank of Sweden Prize in Economics to either be broadened,
properly labeled and disassociated from the Nobel Prizes – or simply
abolished.
The objections
are from the “hard” scientists who study the natural world and whose
research findings are therefore subject to verification or
refutation. They contend that the economics prize devalues all the
real Nobel Prizes and has become an embarrassment. Scores of
ecologists, biologists, natural resource experts, engineers and
thermodynamicists have critiqued economics, building on the 1971
classic by Nicholas Georgescu-Roegen, The Entropy Law and the
Economic Process, which I reviewed in the Harvard Business
Review.
But even the
growth of hybrid professions – so-called ecological economics,
natural resource economics and others, cannot escape economics’
fundamental errors. Many critics liken these to religious beliefs,
such as the postulate of “an invisible hand” of markets. Thus, the
long-standing question of whether economics is a science – or a
profession has now surfaced. I have long-maintained that economics
is a profession, not a science since so many of its “principles” are
unlike the tested principles in physics that can guide a spaceship
to the moon. For example, I showed that economics’ Pareto
Optimality “Principle” ignored prior distribution of wealth, power
and information – and could lead to unfair social outcomes.
Dressing up such concepts in fancy mathematics tends to disguise
their underlying ideologies. Professor Robert Nadeau, a
distinguished historian of science at George Mason University in the
USA has also examined such flaws in economics in his recent books,
The Non-Local Universe (Oxford University Press 1999) and
The Wealth of Nature (Columbia University Press, 2003).
The temptation to
mathematize concepts and faulty assumptions in economics is
understandable, because it obscures these value-laden biases. This
conceals public issues as too “technical” for the public or even
legislators to understand. Thus, economists gain influence with the
wealthy and powerful institutions in society which usually employ
them. Neither have economists been held to the same standards of
accountability as other professions. If a doctor makes a patient
sick, a malpractice suit can be filed. Economists’ bad advice can
make whole countries sick – with impunity.
Neuroscientists,
biochemists and those studying the role of hormones, as well as
psychologists, anthropologists, behavioral scientists and
evolutionary biologists are now dealing death blows to economics’
most enduring error. This lies in its model of “human nature” as
the “rational economic man” who competes against all others to
maximize his own self-interest. This fear and scarcity based model
is that of the early reptilian brain and the territoriality of our
primitive past. Neuroscientist Paul Zak at Claremont University has
linked trust, which enables humans to bond and cooperate, to the
reproductive hormone oxytocin.
David Loye in his
Darwin’s Lost Theory of Love (2000) based on re-visiting
Charles Darwin’s original notebooks, shows that Darwin did not focus
on the “survival of the fittest” and competition as major factors in
human evolution. Darwin was more interested in the human capacity
to bond and trust, to cooperate and share and in the evolution of
altruism as factors in human success. Game theory can lead to
similar conclusions, as Robert Axelrod documents in The Evolution
of Cooperation (1984), also emphasized by Robert Wright in
Non Zero: The Logic of Human Destiny (2000) and Riane Eisler in
The Power of Partnership (2002). Indeed, how otherwise could
we humans have evolved from roving bands of nomad gatherers and
hunters to create cities, corporations, The European Union and the
United Nations?
Other scientists
including physicist, Professor Dr. Hans Peter Durr of Germany’s
famed Max Planck Institute agree that economics is not a science.
Durr says “economics is not even bad science because its core
assumptions are incorrect.” Chaos theorist and Professor of
Mathematics at the University of California, Ralph Abraham believes
that economics may one day become a science. Abraham is researching
the new mathematics employed by some economists, by programming
“agents” in computer models that are supposed to mimic human
behavior.
The snag for
mathematicians is that people don’t behave like atoms, golf balls or
guinea pigs. Unlike the economists “rational economic man” people
are often irrational and their motivations are complex, with many,
especially women, enjoying caring, sharing and cooperating often as
unpaid volunteers. The agent-based computerized efforts to make
economics more scientific may pay off in the future. One recent
model “Sugarscape” simply recreated poverty gaps and trade wars. I
suggested that if they had programmed half of their “agents” with
the behavior females so often exhibit (by choice, or involuntarily
in patriarchal societies) they might have produced different
results. Economics is patriarchal to its core, which accounts for
the rise of feminists economics.
The row over the
Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Science (which I hold was set up to
give this profession the aura of a science) has uncovered all these
deeper issues. A major academic scandal may be unfolding. It may be
ignored by the World Economic Forum of business and government
elites in snowy Davos, Switzerland, while becoming a major focus at
the World Social Forum in sunny Porto Alegre in Brasil.
****
HAZEL HENDERSON, author of Building a Win-Win World and
other books (www.hazelhenderson.com),
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 Markets, premiering on Public Broadcasting
stations in the USA in January, 2005.