Economics - Psychology's Neglected Branch
"It is impossible to describe any human action if one does not refer to the
meaning the actor sees in the stimulus as well as in the end his response is
aiming at."
Ludwig von Mises
Economics - to the great dismay of economists - is merely a branch of
psychology. It deals with individual behaviour and with mass behaviour. Many
of its practitioners sought to disguise its nature as a social science by
applying complex mathematics where common sense and direct experimentation
would have yielded far better results.
The outcome has been an embarrassing divorce between economic theory and its
subjects.
The economic actor is assumed to be constantly engaged in the rational
pursuit of self interest. This is not a realistic model - merely a useful
approximation. According to this latter day - rational - version of the
dismal science, people refrain from repeating their mistakes systematically.
They seek to optimize their preferences. Altruism can be such a preference,
as well.
Still, many people are non-rational or only nearly rational in certain
situations. And the definition of "self-interest" as the pursuit of the
fulfillment of preferences is a tautology.
The theory fails to predict important phenomena such as "strong
reciprocity" - the propensity to "irrationally" sacrifice resources to
reward forthcoming collaborators and punish free-riders. It even fails to
account for simpler forms of apparent selflessness, such as reciprocal
altruism (motivated by hopes of reciprocal benevolent treatment in the
future).
Even the authoritative and mainstream 1995 "Handbook of Experimental
Economics", by John Hagel and Alvin Roth (eds.) admits that people do not
behave in accordance with the predictions of basic economic theories, such
as the standard theory of utility and the theory of general equilibrium.
Irritatingly for economists, people change their preferences mysteriously
and irrationally. This is called "preference reversals".
Moreover, people's preferences, as evidenced by their choices and decisions
in carefully controlled experiments, are inconsistent. They tend to lose
control of their actions or procrastinate because they place greater
importance (i.e., greater "weight") on the present and the near future than
on the far future. This makes most people both irrational and unpredictable.
Either one cannot design an experiment to rigorously and validly test
theorems and conjectures in economics - or something is very flawed with the
intellectual pillars and models of this field.
Neo-classical economics has failed on several fronts simultaneously. This
multiple failure led to despair and the re-examination of basic precepts and
tenets.
Consider this sample of outstanding issues:
Unlike other economic actors and agents, governments are accorded a special
status and receive special treatment in economic theory. Government is
alternately cast as a saint, seeking to selflessly maximize social welfare -
or as the villain, seeking to perpetuate and increase its power ruthlessly,
as per public choice theories.
Both views are caricatures of reality. Governments indeed seek to perpetuate
their clout and increase it - but they do so mostly in order to redistribute
income and rarely for self-enrichment.
Economics also failed until recently to account for the role of innovation
in growth and development. The discipline often ignored the specific nature
of knowledge industries (where returns increase rather than diminish and
network effects prevail). Thus, current economic thinking is woefully
inadequate to deal with information monopolies (such as Microsoft), path
dependence, and pervasive externalities.
Classic cost/benefit analyses fail to tackle very long term investment
horizons (i.e., periods). Their underlying assumption - the opportunity cost
of delayed consumption - fails when applied beyond the investor's useful
economic life expectancy. People care less about their grandchildren's
future than about their own. This is because predictions concerned with the
far future are highly uncertain and investors refuse to base current
decisions on fuzzy "what ifs".
This is a problem because many current investments, such as the fight
against global warming, are likely to yield results only decades hence.
There is no effective method of cost/benefit analysis applicable to such
time horizons.
How are consumer choices influenced by advertising and by pricing? No one
seems to have a clear answer. Advertising is concerned with the
dissemination of information. Yet it is also a signal sent to consumers that
a certain product is useful and qualitative and that the advertiser's
stability, longevity, and profitability are secure. Advertising communicates
a long term commitment to a winning product by a firm with deep pockets.
This is why patrons react to the level of visual exposure to advertising -
regardless of its content.
Humans may be too multi-dimensional and hyper-complex to be usefully
captured by econometric models. These either lack predictive powers or lapse
into logical fallacies, such as the "omitted variable bias" or "reverse
causality". The former is concerned with important variables unaccounted
for - the latter with reciprocal causation, when every cause is also caused
by its own effect.
These are symptoms of an all-pervasive malaise. Economists are simply not
sure what precisely constitutes their subject matter. Is economics about the
construction and testing of models in accordance with certain basic
assumptions? Or should it revolve around the mining of data for emerging
patterns, rules, and "laws"?
On the one hand, patterns based on limited - or, worse, non-recurrent - sets
of data form a questionable foundation for any kind of "science". On the
other hand, models based on assumptions are also in doubt because they are
bound to be replaced by new models with new, hopefully improved,
assumptions.
One way around this apparent quagmire is to put human cognition (i.e.,
psychology) at the heart of economics. Assuming that being human is an
immutable and knowable constant - it should be amenable to scientific
treatment. "Prospect theory", "bounded rationality theories", and the study
of "hindsight bias" as well as other cognitive deficiencies are the outcomes
of this approach.
To qualify as science, economic theory must satisfy the following cumulative
conditions:
1.. All-inclusiveness (anamnetic) - It must encompass, integrate, and
incorporate all the facts known about economic behaviour.
2.. Coherence - It must be chronological, structured and causal. It must
explain, for instance, why a certain economic policy leads to specific
economic outcomes - and why.
3.. Consistency - It must be self-consistent. Its sub-"units" cannot
contradict one another or go against the grain of the main "theory". It must
also be consistent with the observed phenomena, both those related to
economics and those pertaining to non-economic human behaviour. It must
adequately cope with irrationality and cognitive deficits.
4.. Logical compatibility - It must not violate the laws of its internal
logic and the rules of logic "out there", in the real world.
5.. Insightfulness - It must cast the familiar in a new light, mine
patterns and rules from big bodies of data ("data mining"). Its insights
must be the inevitable conclusion of the logic, the language, and the
evolution of the theory.
6.. Aesthetic - Economic theory must be both plausible and "right",
beautiful (aesthetic), not cumbersome, not awkward, not discontinuous,
smooth, and so on.
7.. Parsimony - The theory must employ a minimum number of assumptions and
entities to explain the maximum number of observed economic behaviours.
8.. Explanatory Powers - It must explain the behaviour of economic actors,
their decisions, and why economic events develop the way they do.
9.. Predictive (prognostic) Powers - Economic theory must be able to
predict future economic events and trends as well as the future behaviour of
economic actors.
10.. Prescriptive Powers - The theory must yield policy prescriptions,
much like physics yields technology. Economists must develop "economic
technology" - a set of tools, blueprints, rules of thumb, and mechanisms
with the power to change the " economic world".
11.. Imposing - It must be regarded by society as the preferable and
guiding organizing principle in the economic sphere of human behaviour.
12.. Elasticity - Economic theory must possess the intrinsic abilities to
self organize, reorganize, give room to emerging order, accommodate new data
comfortably, and avoid rigid reactions to attacks from within and from
without.
Many current economic theories do not meet these cumulative criteria and
are, thus, merely glorified narratives.
But meeting the above conditions is not enough. Scientific theories must
also pass the crucial hurdles of testability, verifiability, refutability,
falsifiability, and repeatability. Yet, many economists go as far as to
argue that no experiments can be designed to test the statements of economic
theories.
It is difficult - perhaps impossible - to test hypotheses in economics for
four reasons.
1.. Ethical - Experiments would have to involve human subjects, ignorant
of the reasons for the experiments and their aims. Sometimes even the very
existence of an experiment will have to remain a secret (as with double
blind experiments). Some experiments may involve unpleasant experiences.
This is ethically unacceptable.
2.. Design Problems - The design of experiments in economics is awkward
and difficult. Mistakes are often inevitable, however careful and meticulous
the designer of the experiment is.
3.. The Psychological Uncertainty Principle - The current mental state of
a human subject can be (theoretically) fully known. But the passage of time
and, sometimes, the experiment itself, influence the subject and alter his
or her mental state - a problem known in economic literature as "time
inconsistencies". The very processes of measurement and observation
influence the subject and change it.
4.. Uniqueness - Experiments in economics, therefore, tend to be unique.
They cannot be repeated even when the SAME subjects are involved, simply
because no human subject remains the same for long. Repeating the
experiments with other subjects casts in doubt the scientific value of the
results.
5.. The undergeneration of testable hypotheses - Economic theories do not
generate a sufficient number of hypotheses, which can be subjected to
scientific testing. This has to do with the fabulous (i.e., storytelling)
nature of the discipline.
In a way, economics has an affinity with some private languages. It is a
form of art and, as such, it is self-sufficient and self-contained. If
certain structural, internal constraints and requirements are met - a
statement in economics is deemed to be true even if it does not satisfy
external (scientific) requirements. Thus, the standard theory of utility is
considered valid in economics despite overwhelming empirical evidence to the
contrary - simply because it is aesthetic and mathematically convenient.
So, what are economic "theories" good for?
Economic "theories" and narratives offer an organizing principle, a sense of
order, predictability, and justice. They postulate an inexorable drive
toward greater welfare and utility (i.e., the idea of progress). They render
our chaotic world meaningful and make us feel part of a larger whole.
Economics strives to answer the "why's" and "how's" of our daily life. It is
dialogic and prescriptive (i.e., provides behavioural prescriptions). In
certain ways, it is akin to religion.
In its catechism, the believer (let's say, a politician) asks: "Why... (and
here follows an economic problem or behaviour)".
The economist answers:
"The situation is like this not because the world is whimsically cruel,
irrational, and arbitrary - but because ... (and here follows a causal
explanation based on an economic model). If you were to do this or that the
situation is bound to improve".
The believer feels reassured by this explanation and by the explicit
affirmation that there is hope providing he follows the prescriptions. His
belief in the existence of linear order and justice administered by some
supreme, transcendental principle is restored.
This sense of "law and order" is further enhanced when the theory yields
predictions which come true, either because they are self-fulfilling or
because some real "law", or pattern, has emerged. Alas, this happens rarely.
As "The Economist" notes gloomily, economists have the most disheartening
record of failed predictions - and prescriptions.
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Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self
Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East.
He served as a columnist for Global Politician, Central Europe Review,
PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI)
Senior Business Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central
East Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.
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