Defending the History of Economic Thought on e-books

You can get my Defending the History of Economic Thought as an e-book at this link. It is the first ever book length defence of HET and was written because the History of Economic Thought was, and still is, under threat of exile from amongst economists to the History and Philosophy of Science. It thus is not just an examination of why economists must study HET to become better economists, but why economists must preserve HET if economics is itself to become a better study of how economies work. This is from the link to the e-book:

This book explains the importance of the history of economic thought in the curriculum of economists, whereas most discussions of this kind are devoted only to explaining why such study is of value simply to the individual economist. Steven Kates reaches out past the individual to explain the crucial importance of the history of economic thought in the study of economics itself; without its history at the core of the curriculum, he contends, economics is a lesser subject, less penetrating, less interesting and of much less social value.

The book has had a number of reviews which reminded me just how useful this book is, not because they agreed with me, but because they didn’t. Not that any of them disagreed with me over the importance of the subject itself, only about whether my approach to teaching HET was a sensible one or whether I had overstated the opposition to HET amongst the profession in general. But twice in five years, major societies were faced by attempts to remove HET from within the economics classification and only rearguard action by a handful of historians of economics was able to reverse these already taken decisions.

I will be speaking about the book at the History of Economic Society meeting in Montreal in June and then, at the Australian Society meeting in Auckland, there will be a symposium on the book and its message. Economists have shifted away from being part of the humanities into becoming, not just a social science but social-physics. It is mathematics and pseudo-rigour that now drive the way in which economic theory is designed. Economics cannot be mathematical since there are no data for most of the important questions economics tries to answer. One of the reasons Keynesian economics will not die is that there is a belief that you can measure the things that need to be measured since the national accounts – a set of identities, for heaven’s sake – can be used as a proxy for economic relations. The History of Economic Thought at least reminds economists that their subject once was part of the humanities and some even begin to realise it still needs to be if it is to be any use to society.

Say’s Law and Austrian economics

I have for the first time come across an article that invokes Say’s Law exactly right. It has come up on the Mises Daily website, is by an economist by name of Patrick Barron and titled, Why Central Bank Stimulus Cannot Bring Economic Recovery. It has surprised me to see it since even though Say’s Law is at the heart of the classical theory of the cycle, Austrian economists have tended to ignore the single most important theorem in economics, I think because it is hardly mentioned by either Mises or Hayek. It is also a principle that predates what is Austrian about Austrian economics, going back to the earliest days of economics, first having been discussed by James Mill in 1808 and definitively stated in no uncertain terms by John Stuart Mill in 1848 following the general glut debate (1820-1848). So what does Barron say is the problem with the central bank stimulus?

They are following Keynesian dogma that increasing aggregate demand will spur an increase in employment and production.

Exactly so! The number of economists across the world who understand this is infinitesimal. Aggregate demand is so ingrained it is almost ineradicable. Even Austrian economists of the most pedigreed kind get this wrong. Not this time. And what’s more, he reminds us that this error is a product of Keynes and The General Theory. Say’s Law understood correctly states demand is constituted by supply. Here Barron points out just this very thing:

Keynes tried to prove that production followed demand and not the other way around. He famously stated that governments should pay people to dig holes and then fill them back up in order to put money into the hands of the unemployed, who then would spend it and stimulate production. But notice that the hole diggers did not produce a good or service that was demanded by the market. Keynesian aggregate demand theory is nothing more than a justification for counterfeiting. It is a theory of capital consumption and ignores the irrefutable fact that production is required prior to consumption.

I only wish it were all that irrefutable. In real life, it is refuted every time a Keynesian stimulus is tried. Amongst economists it is the most immovable of dogmas. But let us continue.

Central bank credit expansion is the best example of the Keynesian disregard for the inevitable consequences of violating Say’s Law. Money certificates are cheap to produce. Book entry credit is manufactured at the click of a computer mouse and is, therefore, essentially costless. So, receivers of new money get something for nothing. The consequence of this violation of Say’s Law is capital malinvestment, the opposite of the central bank’s goal of economic stimulus. Central bank economists make the crucial error of confusing GDP spending frenzy with sustainable economic activity. They are measuring capital consumption, not production.

Highlighted here is the difference between the market rate of interest (money) and the natural rate (things). Very nineteenth century but universally accepted by economists right through to 1936. Even Keynes made it central to his Treatise on Money, but that was in 1930 before he came across Malthus. Keeping the monetary side of the economy separate from the real side is crucial to even the most rudimentary understanding of how an economy works.

We must remember that the very purpose of central bank credit expansion is to trigger an increase in lending in order to stimulate the economy to a self-sustaining recovery. But this is impossible. At any one time there is only so much real capital available in society, and real capital cannot be produced by the click of a central bank computer mouse. As my friend Robert Blumen says, a central bank can print money but it cannot print software engineers or even cups of Starbucks coffee to keep them awake and working.

Me and his friend Robert should get together. I harangue my classes holding a $5 bill in one hand and a cup of coffee in the other and ask if they can see the difference. And you would be amazed how hard it is to see the difference, not then and there, but when it counts. Economists are forever pointing out how much money various businesses have stashed away in banks as if the existence of such money stocks is equivalent to a stock of unemployed labour or capital goods available for investment.

So we come to his conclusion, where he discusses not just the wasted effort through trying to stimulate demand by printing money, but the actual wilful ruining of economies by their sensationally misguided attempts to increase the level of spending:

The governments and central banks of the world are engaged in a futile effort to stimulate economic recovery through an expansion of fiat money credit. They will fail due to their ignorance or purposeful blindness to Say’s Law that tells us that money is the agent for exchanging goods that must already exist. New fiat money cannot conjure goods out of thin air, the way central banks conjure money out of thin air. . . . In fact rather than stimulate the economy to greater output, bank credit expansion causes capital destruction and a lower standard of living in the future than would have been the case otherwise.

It’s all insane, really, but what may be more demented than anything is the refusal of the mainstream to perhaps think about this standard macroeconomic theory of theirs. You know, insanity as in doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. As in thinking an increase in aggregate demand will lead to an increase in anything before there has been an increase in production.

Not for the first time do I suggest that anyone interested in Say’s Law and much else should pick up a copy of my Free Market Economics, although I would hold off at the moment for a couple of months. The copyedited manuscript of the second edition arrived via email just today so I will have a very intense week in front of me in going through it with a fine tooth comb. It will be out in September when you can then pick up the new improved edition for yourself.

The scandal-a-day approach to politics

The Obama scandal-a-day approach to politics is beyond clever. Rather than each scandal building upwards into one large fortissimo of outrage, each succeeding scandal makes people forget about the scandal from the day before, especially with the media on hand to play down everything if it’s done by a party of the left. Look at this. Disgusting beyond all measures, but as part of a far-left administration of such startling incompetence willing to lie about everything, everyone is just weary of pointing out the obvious.

Qatar allowing released Taliban men to move freely in country…
Reintegration: Military hides Bergdahl from public view…
FLASHBACK: ‘Converted to Islam And Taught Captors Bomb Making Skills’…
NYT: Left note explaining desertion before going AWOL…
REPORT: Wanted to Renounce Citizenship…
Team Leader: ‘A lot more to story than soldier walking away’…
Death sentence ‘in the realm of possibilities’…
Pentagon knew whereabouts but didn’t risk rescue…
14 SOLDIERS WERE LOST Searching for Bergdahl…
Never Officially Listed as POW…
White House apologizes for ‘oversight’ in notification failure…
FATHER: ‘I am still working to free all Guantanamo prisoners’…
MAG: White House Overrode Internal Objections To Terrorist Release…
‘Suck it up and salute’…
Rubio: Obama ‘Believes He’s Become Monarch Or Emperor’…
Anger explodes…

And by this time tomorrow or at the latest the day after there will be something else. But this is a policy that works only on the left. If you are a right -of-centre party, a scandal-a-day is a technique I wouldn’t try. For parties of the right, even if there is nothing going on, the media will be sure to find something even if there’s nothing much there to be found.

Whose side do you think he’s on?

The list of referred articles from Drudge and not one mentions the likely point:

Qatar allowing released Taliban men to move freely in country…
Reintegration: Military hides Bergdahl from public view…
FLASHBACK: ‘Converted to Islam And Taught Captors Bomb Making Skills’…
NYT: Left note explaining desertion before going AWOL…
REPORT: Wanted to Renounce Citizenship…
Team Leader: ‘A lot more to story than soldier walking away’…
Death sentence ‘in the realm of possibilities’…
Pentagon knew whereabouts but didn’t risk rescue…
14 SOLDIERS WERE LOST Searching for Bergdahl…
Never Officially Listed as POW…
White House apologizes for ‘oversight’ in notification failure…
FATHER: ‘I am still working to free all Guantanamo prisoners’…
MAG: White House Overrode Internal Objections To Terrorist Release…
‘Suck it up and salute’…
Rubio: Obama ‘Believes He’s Become Monarch Or Emperor’…
Anger explodes…

Obama is on the other side.