Robert J.
Shiller
NEW HAVEN –
Since the global financial crisis and recession of 2007-2009, criticism of the
economics profession has intensified. The failure of all but a few professional
economists to forecast the episode – the aftereffects of which still linger –
has led many to question whether the economics profession contributes anything
significant to society. If they were unable to foresee something so important
to people’s wellbeing, what good are they?
Indeed,
economists failed to forecast most of the major crises in the last century,
including the severe 1920-21 slump, the 1980-82 back-to-back recessions, and
the worst of them all, the Great Depression after the 1929 stock-market crash.
In searching news archives for the year before the start of these recessions, I
found virtually no warning from economists of a severe crisis ahead. Instead,
newspapers emphasized the views of business executives or politicians, who
tended to be very optimistic.
The closest
thing to a real warning came before the 1980-82 downturn. In 1979, Federal
Reserve Chair Paul A. Volcker told the Joint Economic Committee of the US
Congress that the United
States faced “unpleasant economic
circumstances,” and had a “need for hard decisions, for restraint, and even for
sacrifice.” The likelihood that the Fed would have to take drastic steps to
curb galloping inflation, together with the effects of the 1979 oil crisis,
made a serious recession quite likely.
Nonetheless,
whenever a crisis loomed in the last century, the broad consensus among
economists was that it did not. As far as I can find, almost no one in the
profession – not even luminaries like John Maynard Keynes, Friedrich Hayek, or
Irving Fisher – made public statements anticipating the Great Depression.
As the
historian Douglas Irwin has documented, a major exception was the Swedish
economist Gustav Cassel. In a series of lectures at Columbia
University in 1928, Cassel
warned of “a prolonged and worldwide depression.” But his rather technical
discussion (which focused on monetary economics and the gold standard) forged
no new consensus among economists, and the news media reported no clear sense
of alarm.
Interestingly,
contemporary news accounts reveal little evidence of public anger at economists
after disaster struck in 1929. So why has the failure to foresee the latest
crisis turned out so differently for the profession? Why has it – unlike
previous forecasting failures – stoked so much mistrust of economists?
One reason
may be the perception that many economists were smugly promoting the “efficient
markets hypothesis” – a view that seemed to rule out a collapse in asset
prices. Believing that markets always know best, they dismissed warnings by a
few mere mortals (including me) about overpricing of equities and housing.
After both markets crashed spectacularly, the profession’s credibility took a
direct hit.
But this
criticism is unfair. We do not blame physicians for failing to predict all of
our illnesses. Our maladies are largely random, and even if our doctors cannot
tell us which ones we will have in the next year, or eliminate all of our
suffering when we have them, we are happy for the help that they can provide.
Likewise, most economists devote their efforts to issues far removed from
establishing a consensus outlook for the stock market or the unemployment rate.
And we should be grateful that they do.
In his new
book Trillion Dollar Economists, Robert Litan of the Brookings Institution
argues that the economics profession has “created trillions of dollars of
income and wealth for the United
States and the rest of the world.” That
sounds like a nice contribution for a relatively small profession, especially
if we do some simple arithmetic. There are, for example, only 20,000 members of
the American Economic Association (of which I am President-Elect); if they have
created, say, $2 trillion of income and wealth, that is about $100 million per
economist.
A cynic
might ask, “If economists are so smart, why aren’t they the richest people
around?” The answer is simple: Most economic ideas are public goods that cannot
be patented or otherwise owned by their inventors. Just because most economists
are not rich does not mean that they have not made many people richer.
The fun
thing about Litan’s book is that he details many clever little ideas about how
to run businesses or to manage the economy better. They lie in the realm of
optimal pricing and marketing mechanisms, regulation of monopolies,
natural-resource management, public-goods provision, and finance. None of them
is worth even a trillion dollars, but, taken together, Litan’s conclusion is
plausible indeed.
The 2010
book Better Living through Economics, edited by John Siegfried, emphasizes the
real-world impact of such innovations: emissions trading, the earned-income tax
credit, low trade tariffs, welfare-to-work programs, more effective monetary
policy, auctions of spectrum licenses, transport-sector deregulation,
deferred-acceptance algorithms, enlightened antitrust policy, an all-volunteer
military, and clever use of default options to promote saving for retirement.
The
innovations described in Litan’s and Siegfried’s books show that the economics
profession has produced an enormous amount of extremely valuable work,
characterized by a serious effort to provide genuine evidence. Yes, most economists
fail to predict financial crises – just as doctors fail to predict disease.
But, like doctors, they have made life manifestly better for everyone.
Robert J.
Shiller, a 2013 Nobel laureate in economics, is Professor of Economics at Yale University
and the co-creator of the Case-Shiller Index of US house prices. He is the
author of Irrational Exuberance, the third edition of which will be published
in January 2015, and, most recently, Finance and the Good Society.
Read more
at http://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/are-economists-good-by-robert-j--shiller-2015-01#DgqDLCbITcT1iPuz.99
I every time used to study article in news papers but now as I am a user of web thus from now
ReplyDeleteI am using net for content, thanks to web.
Feel free to surf to my web-site: home renovator ()
What's up, just wanted to say, I enjoyed this post.
ReplyDeleteIt was inspiring. Keep on posting!
My blog post home design ideas ()