Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political Economy Peter J. Boettke...

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Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political Economy Peter J. Boettke Econ 828/Fall 2004 8 November

Transcript of Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political Economy Peter J. Boettke...

Page 1: Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political Economy Peter J. Boettke Econ 828/Fall 2004 8 November.

Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political EconomyPeter J. Boettke

Econ 828/Fall 2004

8 November

Page 2: Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political Economy Peter J. Boettke Econ 828/Fall 2004 8 November.

Basic Point

Costs and Benefits are known to the individual decision maker and only at the moment of decision.

Context matters in decision making because the context of choice determines the structure of incentives faced and the trade offs that must be weighed.

Economic critique of policy choice must be limited to means/ends analysis.

Political economy possesses relevance only to the extent that economic analysis can be “scientific” in the sense of being ends-independent.

Page 3: Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political Economy Peter J. Boettke Econ 828/Fall 2004 8 November.

Buchanan’s contribution to economics and political economy Economics is a “science”, but it is a “philosophical science”, and the

strictures against scientism offered by Knight and Hayek should be heeded.

Economics is about choice and processes of adjustment, not states of rest. Equilibrium models are only useful when we recognize their limits.

Economics is about exchange, not about maximizing. Exchange relationships and arbitrage activity should be the central focus of market theory.

Economic is about individual actors, not collective entities. Only individuals choose.

Economics is about a game played within rules. Economics cannot be studied properly outside of politics. The choices

among different rules of the game cannot be ignored. The most important function of economics as a discipline is its didactic

role in explaining the principles of spontaneous order so that citizens can become informed participants in the democratic process.

Economics is elementary.

Page 4: Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political Economy Peter J. Boettke Econ 828/Fall 2004 8 November.

Some “Archeology of Knowledge” with respect to these 8 propositions of Buchanan’s

Frank Knight’s teaching Real Cost vs. Alternative Cost

Marshall – Principles, 1890, p. 290 We might as reasonably dispute whether it is the upper or the lower blade of a pair of scissors that

cuts a piece of paper, as whether value is governed by utility or cost of production. It is true that when one blade is held still, and the cutting is effected by moving the other, we may say with careless brevity that the cutting is done by the second; but the statement is not strictly accurate, and is to be excused only so long as it claims to be merely a popular and not a strictly scientific account of what happens.

Knight – A Suggesting for Simplifying the Statement of the General Theory of Price, JPE (1928), p. 359. If costs are stated in terms of alternative commodities and all reference either to "sacrifice" or

"outlays" simply omitted, we retain the scientific content of cost of production theory while side-tracking the sources of a century and a half of controversy.

Philip Wicksteed and The Common-Sense of Political Economy The only sense, then, in which cost of production can affect the value of one thing, is the sense in which it is

itself the value of another thing. Thus, what has been variously termed "utility", "ophelimity", or "desiredness", is the sole and ultimate determinant of all exchange values.

The Burden of the Public Debt Debate We owe it to ourselves --- Functional Finance

The Subjectivist Economics of the Austrian School “Mises and his followers have been too prone to accept the splendid isolation of arrogant eccentrics to divorce

their teaching too sharply from mainstream interests, and too eager to launch into polemic: epistemological, methodological, ideological.” Buchanan 1973, p. 11.

The LSE Opportunity Cost tradition Common Sense tradition and the practical task of the business man “to accept fully the implications of the theory of opportunity cost that is implicit in these essays (The LSE

Essays on Cost) requires the modern economist to throw overboard too much of his invested intellectual capital.” Buchanan 1973, p. 13.

Page 5: Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political Economy Peter J. Boettke Econ 828/Fall 2004 8 November.

The Nature and Significance of Opportunity Costs Cost must be rendered in utility dimension and not commodity,

and cost is best understood as the alternatives that are foregone in making a decision to pursue one path and not the other.

Costs are borne exclusively by the decision-maker; it is not possible for cost to be shifted to or imposed on others.

Costs are subjective, they exist in the mind of the decision maker and nowhere else.

Cost is based on anticipation; forward looking. Costs can never be realized because of the fact of choice itself –

that which is given up cannot be enjoyed. Costs cannot be measured by someone other than the decision-

maker because there is no way that subjective experience can be directly observed.

Costs are dated at the moment of decision or choice

Page 6: Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political Economy Peter J. Boettke Econ 828/Fall 2004 8 November.

What are the Implications of all of this?“The implications of all of this for modern welfare

economics could scarcely be underestimated. My argument suggests that almost all of this subdiscipline has been based on simple methodological confusion. It has converted predictive propositions into allocative norms which have then been used to make policy proposals. …

In one sense it might be said that the neoclassical economist has succumbed to the temptation to make his whole theory more general than its methodology warrants.” Cost and Choice, p. 41.

Page 7: Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political Economy Peter J. Boettke Econ 828/Fall 2004 8 November.

Some Examples of Economists as Social Engineers Guided by Welfare Economics Debate Over Market Socialism

Costs without Markets (Chapter 6) Keynesian Demand Management

Pretense of knowledge and pieces on the chess board (Chapter 4)

Cost Benefit Analysis Pigovian Welfare Economics (Chapter 5)

Page 8: Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political Economy Peter J. Boettke Econ 828/Fall 2004 8 November.

Why Subjectivism?

Buchanan’s critique Philosophically sound, but scientifically empty

Predictive component is necessary if we are to have science

Kirzner’s Defense Economics is value-free and thus scientific to the

extent, and only to that extent, that it is consistently subjectivist. Means/ends analysis

Page 9: Subjectivism and the Objectivity of Analysis in Economics and Political Economy Peter J. Boettke Econ 828/Fall 2004 8 November.

Subjectivism and Buchanan

Rather, than viewing his work as schizophrenic (e.g., when men are rats vs. when men are human actors), we can see how consistent subjectivism constraints economics in terms of policy attempting to control behavior, and instead focuses on the rules of the games which provide an environment within which individuals choose.