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© Hazel Henderson, October 2005
www.hazelhenderson.com
(word count 1,171)
NOBEL PRIZES AND THE BANK OF SWEDEN’S GAME
by
Hazel Henderson
The 2005 Bank of Sweden Prize in
Economics (in Memory of Alfred Nobel) was recently announced. The
winners, Robert Aumann of Hebrew University in Israel and Thomas
Schelling of the University of Maryland, USA are mathematicians and
game theorists. The economics profession has adopted methods of game
theory because they offer deeper insights into human behavior and
the games people play.
The traditional model of “homo
economicus” – that ever-rational individual, always maximizing his
self-interest in competition with others is now acknowledged as
unrealistic. This bleak model of human behavior at the heart of
economics is not only dismal – but increasingly proven wrong by many
other scientists and much recent research by neuroscientists,
microbiologists, psychologists, anthropologists and yes, game
theorists. This is why many recent Bank of Sweden Economics prizes
have gone to scientists studying human behavior beyond the economics
profession, from psychologists to game theorists John Harsonyi, John
Nash and Reinhard Selten in 1994.
Economics is a powerful
profession, bestriding public policy and private decision-making
like a Colossus – and enjoys priority funding at most universities
and business schools. Economics also spreads its influence by
incorporating research from other fields as its own: as
“environmental-economics,” “behavioral-economics” and even “neuro-economics.”
Economics, like other social “sciences,” has been viewed as less
rigorous and “softer” than the physical or “hard” sciences. Physics
and mathematics can reliably guide spaceships, perform engineering
feats and design bridges. Economists admit that their models are not
reliable, rarely predict economic performance and have failed for
economic development.
So how did the Bank of Sweden in
1968 persuade the Nobel Prize Committee to accept a prize (of US
$1million) for Economic science – in memory of Alfred Nobel? Peter
Nobel, descendant of Alfred Nobel and a human rights lawyer believes
it was a public relations effort to legitimize economics as a
science. Nobel added in an interview with me (October 26, 2005) “I
don’t think economics is a science and I hope the Bank of Sweden
Prize will be de-linked from the Nobel Prize.” Peter Nobel with
three of his cousins wrote an article four years ago, calling for
this “False Nobel” in economics to be awarded separately. Another
answer, says historian of science Robert Nadeau, author of The
Non Local Universe, “Lies in the Cold War politics of the time,
where Marxist economists were claiming their theories as scientific
and so were the competing capitalist economists of the West. What
better way to win the argument than by persuading the Nobel
Committee to make the new Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic
Science part of its annual awards!”
Part of this Cold War competition
among economists involved recruiting mathematics to “dress up” the
dubious assumptions of both camps – whether the “invisible hand” and
“homo economicus” of the capitalist economic theories or the
similarly arcane Marxist “labor theory” of value. We all know that
capitalism won. Neo-liberal market economics became evermore clothed
in mathematical models – including those borrowed from game theory.
In 2004, when the Bank of Sweden
Prize was awarded to two more economists of the Chicago School, Finn
Kydland and Edward Prescott for their 1970 paper (using a lot of
fancy mathematics) purporting to prove why central banks should be
free of political oversight – many mathematicians finally revolted.
Many articles appeared in December 2004, by mathematicians
protesting at such misuses of their models – and dozens of
editorials (including my own) picked up this emerging scientific
brouhaha.
The latest Bank of Sweden
prizewinners Aumann and Schelling are masterful researchers of human
behavior and many of the games people and institutions play – even
though, like economists, they focused mostly on conflict and
competition. This bias in both economics and game theory
shortchanges the more cooperative sharing and altruistic half of the
human behavior. The predominant evidence for cooperation in
humanity’s success is now confirmed by new scientific research into
hormones, including oxytocin (which allows bonding) and the “mirror”
cells in human brains that are a basis for empathy with other humans
as I explore in “21st Century Strategies for Sustainability” (www.hazelhenderson.com,
click on Recent Papers).
It’s not surprising that the 2005
Bank of Sweden Prize went to game theorists studying human conflict
and competitive behavior, so foundational in economic theory. Thomas
Schelling’s mathematical game theory models were focused on conflict
and were used during the Vietnam War as advice to the US Pentagon on
how best to break the resistance of the Viet Cong. Schelling’s
advice turned out to be quite wrong, as documented by Fred Kaplan in
“All Pain, No Gain,” Oct. 11, 2005 in Slate (www.slate.msn.com).
Aumann also worked during the Cold
War, advising the USA on the military strength of the USSR. Between
1965-1968, Aumann also co-wrote papers for the US Arms Control and
Disarmament Agency advising on how to play the “poker game” with the
Russians of how many missiles each side possessed and strategies for
cutting them.
But trying to use mathematical
models to delve deeper into human behavior may be just as
inappropriate as using them in economics. The new research from
other sciences shows just how complex human behavior really is. Most
disciplines studying societies and human interactions embrace the
entire behavioral repertoire from conflict and competition to
cooperation, sharing, caring and even altruism.
Even Charles Darwin’s books are
being re-evaluated (www.thedarwinproject.com)
and we are learning that Darwin only mentioned competition and the
survival of the fittest quite briefly and instead focused on the
human genius for bonding, sharing and cooperation as keys to our
species’ success – while predicting human evolution toward altruism.
How did economics and game theory
get stuck on competition? One explanation is that Darwin’s theories
were hijacked by the elites in Victorian Britain, who saw “the
survival of the fittest” as the justification for the class system.
This focus on competition as fundamental to human nature was also a
basic tenet of Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations (1776). Smith’s
invoking of an “invisible hand” that mediated individual competition
to produce the most efficient allocation of resources, was derived
from the Newtonian physics of the time. Each generation of
economists built on these shaky foundations – now being exposed by
more advanced science.
A deeper explanation (familiar to
women everywhere) is simply male psychology, including the effects
of the hormone, testosterone, known to increase aggressive behavior.
Economics has always been patriarchal at its core. Its definition of
“rational behavior” as competitive maximizing of self-interest
implies that cooperative behavior, sharing, caring and volunteering
activities are “irrational.” By this logic, economics ignores all
unpaid work (at least 50% of all production in most countries) while
treating the work of females raising children, managing households,
growing food for the family (what I call the Love Economy) as
“uneconomic.”
Game theorists focus on such
competitive “win-lose” and “lose-lose” games as the “prisoner’s
dilemma” where lack of trust between two accused of a crime leads
each to the worst outcome for both. Yet, recent research on female
subjects showed they rejected the “prisoner’s dilemma” and both won
the best outcome (a “win-win” game) because they trusted each other.
*****
Hazel Henderson, author of Beyond
Globalization and other books, co-created the
Calvert-Henderson Quality of Life Indicators, updated at
www.calvert-henderson.com and is Executive Producer of the
new financial TV series, “Ethical Markets,”
currently airing on PBS
stations in the USA.