Political Economy: Critique of Neoclassical Economics

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Political Economy: Critique of Neoclassical Economics

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Title: Political Economy: Critique of Neoclassical Economics


1
Political Economy Critique of Neoclassical
Economics
  • Wrong answers to the wrong questions Equilibrium

2
Last week, Supply
  • Theory of the firm a shambles
  • Profit maximisation formula wrong. When amended
  • PC PriceMarginal Cost impossible
  • PMRMC for profit maximisers
  • Competition monopoly produce same results
  • If costs lower, monopoly better than PC
  • Welfare loss due to profit-maximising behavior,
    not monopoly
  • Theory irrelevant to real world anyway
  • This week
  • General Equilibrium cant be in equilibrium
  • General Dynamics needed, not general
    equilibrium

3
From one to many
  • Previous lectures flaws in (Marshallian) model
    of single industry
  • This lecture Ignoring flaws in Marshallian
    model(!), flaws in (Walrasian) model of entire
    economy
  • The dilemma
  • Equilibrium in one market can be disturbed by
    disequilibrium in another
  • What are conditions that will give
    equilibriumequality of demand supplyin all
    markets?
  • First person to consider this Leon Walras (1874)
  • Real-world equilibrium involved use of some
    commodities to make others, dynamic price
    output setting, product innovation

4
Walras General Equilibrium
  • Walras abstracted from all this
  • Pure exchange model (all quantities of all goods
    already given and pre-allocated)
  • Traders simply wish to exchange surplus
    commodities for desired ones
  • Even so, out of equilibrium trade would disturb
    income/wealth distribution
  • Above equilibrium sellers gain income, below
    equilibrium lose
  • Non-equilibrium system might never converge
  • Invented fiction to avoid problem
  • No trades allowed in any market until all markets
    in equilibrium
  • Prices set by impartial costless Auctioneer

5
Walras General Equilibrium
  • First, let us imagine a market in which only
    consumer goods and services are bought and sold
    Once the prices of all these goods and services
    have been cried at random , each party to the
    exchange will offer at these prices those goods
    or services of which he thinks he has relatively
    too much, and he will demand those articles of
    which he thinks he has relatively too little for
    his consumption during a certain period of time.
    The quantities of each thing effectively demanded
    and offered having been determined in this way,
    the prices of those things for which the demand
    exceeds the offer will rise, and the prices of
    those things of which the offer exceeds the
    demand will fall. New prices now having been
    cried, each party to the exchange will offer and
    demand new quantities. And again prices will rise
    or fall until the demand and the offer of each
    good and each service are equal. Then the prices
    will be current equilibrium prices and exchange
    will effectively take place. (Walras 1874)
  • A dynamic but out of time process of price
    adjustment to equilibrium

6
Walras General Equilibrium the Process
  • Auctioneer makes initial guess at Prices
  • Prices determine agents
  • Wealth (Prices quantities held)
  • Supplies (Stocks held desired for consumption)
  • Demands (Quantities desired stocks held)
  • Each agent balanced (Prices Supplies Prices
    Demands)
  • If all markets in equilibrium, trade occurs
  • If not
  • Auctioneer increases price for commodities where
    Demand Supply, decreases where Supply Demand
  • Agents recalculate Demands Supplies
  • Process continues until equilibrium in all
    markets
  • Then trade allowed to occur

7
Walras General Equilibrium the Problem
  • Will process actually converge to equilibrium
    Prices?
  • Walras thought so
  • Then the prices will be current equilibrium
    prices and exchange will effectively take place.
  • But the problem is
  • Change in price in one market affects all others
  • Feedback from other markets back to first one
  • Feedback effects could overwhelm direct effects
  • Walras surmised that
  • Direct effects all in correct direction (price up
    where demandsupply, down where supplydemand)
  • Indirect effects in any direction, but could
    cancel each other out

8
Walras General Equilibrium the Problem
  • This will appear probable if we remember that
    the change from pb to pb, which reduced the
    above inequality to an equality, exerted a direct
    influence that was invariably in the direction of
    equality at least so far as the demand for (B)
    was concerned while the consequent changes
    from pc to pc, pd to pd, , which moved the
    foregoing inequality farther away from equality,
    exerted indirect influences, some in the
    direction of equality and some in the opposite
    direction, at least so far as the demand for (B)
    was concerned, so that up to a certain point they
    cancelled each other out. Hence, the new system
    of prices (pb, pc, pd, ) is closer to
    equilibrium than the old system of prices (pb,
    pc, pd, ) and it is only necessary to
    continue this process along the same lines for
    the system to move closer and closer to
    equilibrium. (Walras 1874 1954 my emphasis)

9
Walras General Equilibrium the Promise
  • (1) Establish correctness of surmise of
    convergence to equilibrium
  • (2) Generalise to system with
  • (a) Production
  • (b) Out of equilibrium exchange
  • Unfortunately, didnt even get to 1st base
  • From static analysis (going back to Walras and
    Marshall), it is known that, even under very
    plausible circumstances, Walrasian tatonnement
    systems have multiple equilibria Hence it is
    not to be expected that, in a reasonably broad
    class if economic environments every
    equilibrium point of a Walrasian tatonnement
    process will be stable. (Hurwicz 1986 46-47)

10
Walras General Equilibrium the Failure
  • How should neoclassicals have reacted?
  • From a normative and computational point of view
    it is natural to conclude that the possible
    absence of global stability calls for
  • a non-equilibrium model of exchange?
  • How did they react? (Hurwicz 1986 47-48)
  • replacing the Walrasian tatonnement by another
    dynamic process!
  • Proposed adjusting individual demand functions!
  • Clearly the informational burden of this system
    is greater than that of Walras, but
  • one must, in general, be prepared to require a
    bigger message space when stability is demanded.

11
Walras General Equilibrium the Failure
  • Walras model already fictional
  • Abstracts from real-world phenomena of
  • Production
  • Non-equilibrium exchange
  • If it cant necessarily reach equilibrium, what
    hope is there that real-world can?
  • But neoclassicals take succour in even more
    unreal assumptions to make model workeven if
    cant be applied to real world
  • Pinnacle of this the Arrow-Debreu model of
    general equilibrium

12
Walras General Equilibrium the Failure
  • Debreu (1959) establishes necessary conditions
    for general equilibrium to exist
  • Instantaneous market where all producers
    consumers
  • Know the future
  • Decide all purchases for all time
  • Generalised to uncertain future by
    effectively making past mistakes reversible via
    insurance markets for all possible future events
  • Insure against buying an umbrella on days when it
    doesnt rain
  • Only have to pay for umbrella if it does rain (
    you need it), not if it doesnt

13
Walras General Equilibrium the Failure
  • For any economic agent a complete action plan
    (made now for the whole future), or more briefly
    an action, is a specification for each commodity
    of the quantity that he will make available or
    that will be made available to him, i.e., a
    complete listing of the quantities of his inputs
    and of his outputs
  • For a producer, say the jth one, a production
    plan (made now for the whole future) is a
    specification of the quantities of all his inputs
    and all his outputs The certainty assumption
    implies that he knows now what input-output
    combinations will be possible in the future
    (although he may not know the details of
    technical processes which will make them
    possible)
  • As in the case of a producer, the role of a
    consumer is to choose a complete consumption
    plan His role is to choose (and carry out) a
    consumption plan made now for the whole future,
    i.e., a specification of the quantities of all
    his inputs and all his outputs. (Debreu 1959)

14
Walras General Equilibrium the Failure
  • The analysis is extended in this chapter to the
    case where uncertain events determine the
    consumption sets, the production sets, and the
    resources of the economy. A contract for the
    transfer of a commodity now specifies, in
    addition to its physical properties, its location
    and its date, an event on the occurrence of which
    the transfer is conditional. This new definition
    of a commodity allows one to obtain a theory of
    uncertainty free from any probability concept and
    formally identical with the theory of certainty
    developed in the preceding chapters. (Debreu
    1959 my emphases)

and get serious!
Let's cut the...
15
Walras General Equilibrium the Failure
  • A physicists take on this model
  • Here is an example at time t0 you plan your
    entire future, ordering a car on one future date,
    committing to pay for your childrens education
    on another date, buying your vacation house,
    placing all future orders for daily groceries,
    drugs All demands for your lifetime are planned
    and ordered in preference. In other words, your
    and your familys entire future is decided
    completely at time zero. These assumptions were
    seen as necessary in order to construct a theory
    where one could prove rigorous mathematical
    theorems. Theorem proving about totally
    unrealistic markets became more important than
    the empirics of real markets in this picture.
    (McCauley 2004 15)

16
Walras General Equilibrium the Failure
  • Why such unrealistic assumptions?
  • Because any even slightly more realistic model is
    provably unstable

Warning!
Warning!
  • Serious maths zone approaching!
  • Intuition main thing that matters
  • Stability of outputs stability of prices in
    conflict

17
Can General Equilibrium be in equilibrium?
  • Simplest possible real world model
  • n markets
  • Commodities produced using input-output system
  • Spot markets for sale of output (supplydemand)
  • All output in year t becomes input in year t1
  • Consumption internalised
  • Economy growing over time
  • For equilibrium,
  • Outputs in year 0 must be sufficient for
    production in year 1
  • Prices must enable producers to buy all inputs
  • Conditions expressed in matrix equations

18
Can General Equilibrium be in equilibrium?
  • Outputs in year t1 output input transformation
    of inputs in previous period t

Outputs in 2004 areinputs for 2005
Production process derived from productive
input-output matrix
Output in 2005(vector of outputs)
  • For stable growth, each sector must grow at the
    same rate (a p.a.)

2005s output of socks,DVD players, etc., is
agreater than 2004s
19
Can General Equilibrium be in equilibrium?
  • Two conditions on production can be combined
    using matrix maths

The production relation
Has to equal growth condition
Equating them
Rearrange using matrix rules
I is matrix equivalent of 1
So this bit
has to be somehow equivalent to zero for this
equation to be feasible
20
Can General Equilibrium be in equilibrium?
is equivalent to zero if
  • The expression

its determinant is equal to zero more on that
soon
  • Price condition also expressed in matrix equation
  • Prices must enable producers to purchase
    necessary inputs
  • For equilibrium, relative prices must be constant
    (p)
  • Cost of inputs is p (list of prices) times A
    (table of outputs produced from inputs) times
    equilibrium rate of profit p

Table of outputsproduced frominputs
List of prices
Uniform profit rate
21
Can General Equilibrium be in equilibrium?
  • Rearrange using matrix rules
  • Order of multiplication important
  • (1) Multiply both sides by inverse of A
  • (2) A times its inverse equals I (matrix with 1s
    on diagonal 0s elsewhere)
  • (3) Move to LHS
  • (4) Group on p

22
Can General Equilibrium be in equilibrium?
is equivalent to zero if
  • The expression

its determinant is equal to zero
  • Matrices have a property called eigenvalues
  • Basically, roots (zeroes) of polynomialwhere it
    crosses x-axis
  • (1 root for yabx, 2 for yabxcx2, etc.)
  • For stability, biggest root must be less than 1
  • Problem A A-1 have inverse roots
  • If ½ biggest eigenvalue of A, then 2 is biggest
    eigenvalue of A-1.
  • Not a problem if all eigenvalues of A
  • -½ and -2 both less than zero
  • Unfortunately

23
Can General Equilibrium be in equilibrium?
  • Matrix A derived from table of inputs needed to
    produce outputs
  • Input-output table has all non-negative entries
  • Cant use negative quantities of commodity as
    input
  • Advanced maths theorems (Perron-Frobenius) show
    that As biggest eigenvalue must be 0
  • So either A or A-1 (or both) must have root 1
  • If A has root of ½ then A-1 has root of 2
  • Results
  • Either prices or quantities must be unstable
  • If system diverges a fraction from stability, it
    will never return
  • General Equilibrium will never be in
    equilibrium

24
Can General Equilibrium be in equilibrium?
  • Intuition
  • Walras hoped direct effects of price changes
  • Banana supply exceeds demand ? banana price falls
    ? closer to equilibrium
  • would outweigh indirect effects
  • Banana price fall ? fall in income for banana
    producers ? fall in demand for biscuits ?
    feedback on banana industry
  • Maths shows not the case plausible model of
    growing production economy unstable feedback
    effects outweigh direct

25
Can General Equilibrium be in equilibrium?
  • Neoclassical reactions?
  • (1) Its just an artefact of matrices
  • (2) Lets find ways to make it stable!
  • (3) Lets ignore stability
  • (1) Its just an artefact of matrices
  • Input-output table strictly linear has rigid
    proportions between inputs (commodities)
    outputs
  • Neoclassical production functions nonlinear
    variable proportions, input substitution (labor
    for capital)
  • Therefore neoclassical model will be stable while
    IO/matrix/Leontief systems will not

Wrong!
26
Its just an artefact of matrices
  • Matrix is linear
  • like b in y(x)abx only with many variables
  • Neoclassical production functions are nonlinear
  • like y(x)abxcx2dx3
  • But
  • Any nonlinear function can be approximated by
    polynomial
  • E.g., sin(x)
  • Linear bit of sin(x) is x
  • Best guess for sin(x) near x0
  • Linear bit of production function is IO matrix
  • Stability near equilibrium determined by linear
    bit only

27
Its just an artefact of matrices
  • Nonlinear production function might stop
    prices/quantities becoming crazy
  • Negative prices or quantities
  • But wont make equilibrium stable
  • Multiple supply demand markets cant all be
    in equilibrium
  • unless started out there and never disturbed
  • which takes us to (2) Lets find ways to make it
    stable!
  • First neoclassical to realise instability problem
    was Jorgenson (1960)

28
(2) Lets find ways to make it stable!
  • If the output system is relatively stable, the
    price system cannot be, and vice versa
    (Jorgenson 1960 895)
  • The conclusion is that excess capacity (or
    positive profit levels or both) is necessary
    for the interpretation of the dynamic
    input-output system as a model of an actual
    economy (Jorgenson 1960 893)
  • So far so good but then in 1961
  • To avoid dual instability, a number of
    re-interpretations of the basic model have been
    proposed In this paper, a third
    re-interpretation is suggested (Jorgenson
    1961 106)

29
(2) Lets find ways to make it stable!
  • First, the behavior of the system depends not
    only on the technological characteristics of the
    system, but also on the behavior of economic
    decision-makers in each of the sectors of the
    economy. Secondly, the complete system surmounts
    the difficulties associated with dual
    instability by suitable restrictions on the
    initial values of the disequilibrium variables,
    the non-negativity of all economic variables is
    preserved
  • Introduced stocks Reserve Bank interest rate to
    try to stabilise model
  • Got maths wrong! (See Blatt 1983 134, Jorgenson
    1961 112, 115) System still unstable
  • Other equally flawed attempts (turnpike theorems
    etc.) so

30
(3) Lets ignore stability
  • Dominant model of general equilibrium
    Arrow-Debreu
  • Model designed to remove dynamics entirely
  • For any economic agent a complete action plan
    (made now for the whole future)
  • No time process
  • Market occurs once only in history of planet
  • All transactions for all time take place at once
  • Uncertainty re future abolished
  • A contract for the transfer of a commodity now
    specifies, an event on the occurrence of which
    the transfer is conditional. This new definition
    of a commodity allows one to obtain a theory of
    uncertainty formally identical with the theory
    of certainty developed in the preceding chapters.

31
Its equilibrium, but is it economics?
  • For Walras, general equilibrium theory was an
    abstract but nevertheless realistic description
    of the functioning of a capitalist economy. He
    was therefore more concerned to show that markets
    will clear automatically via price adjustments
    than to prove that a unique set of prices and
    quantities is capable of clearing all markets
    simultaneously. By the time we got to Arrow and
    Debreu, however, general equilibrium theory had
    ceased to make any descriptive claim about actual
    economic systems It had become a perfect example
    of what Ronald Coase has called blackboard
    economics, a model that can be written down on
    blackboards using economic terms like prices,
    quantities, factors of production, and so on,
    but that nevertheless is clearly and even
    scandalously unrepresentative of any recognizable
    economic system. (Blaug 1998)

32
Is equilibrium economics?
  • Obvious conclusions from general equilibrium
    failures
  • If model cant be in equilibrium, then
  • economy itself certainly cant be
  • economics should model out of equilibrium
    behaviour
  • equilibrium analysis cant be economics
  • Economics can only develop using dynamics
  • Out of equilibrium modeling commonplace in true
    sciences
  • Example from meteorology Lorenz model of
    2-dimensional weather system (foundation of
    modern weather prediction)

33
Non-equilibrium modeling
  • Non-equilibrium models use
  • Differential rather than simultaneous equations
  • Rate of change of x a function of x
  • Computer simulations rather than drawings
  • Lorenzs weather model simplified version of
    empirically derived fluid flow equations

x displacement
y displacement
temperature gradient
  • Thinking like a (neoclassical) economist, lets
    work out equilibrium

34
Lorenzs weather model
  • First step, set all rates of change to zero

yx part of equilibrium (also xy0)
b-z1 part of equilibrium ( z0 if y0)
x2c.z part of equilibrium
  • Oh Oh there are 3 equilibria!

the other root of x2
Nope!
  • Surely 1 is stable the other 2 arent?

35
Lorenzs weather model
  • All 3 equilibria are unstable!
  • If system starts at (1), (2) or (3), it stays
    there
  • But if disturbed even a fraction, it flies away
  • So the system must break down?

Nope!
  • Wild dynamic behaviour
  • But never nonsense values for x,y, z
  • The tiniest push and equilibrium is out the
    window
  • But the system cycles rather than breaking down

36
Lorenzs weather model
  • And behind the apparent chaos
  • A complex pattern of feedbacks between x, y z
  • Inspiration for modern science of complexity

37
Meanwhile, back in the economy
  • Economy just as cyclical as the weather
  • Need models of cyclical behaviour, not
    equilibrium
  • Plenty exist, but not developed by neoclassicals
  • Neoclassicals almost afraid to think in cyclical
    terms Cant think outside equilibrium square
  • Instead Post-Keynesians (Kaldor, Goodwin), some
    Marxists (Foley, Levy), evolutionary economists
    (Schumpeter), chaos/complexity theorists
    (Goodwin, Chiarella) econophysicists (Ponzi)
  • An example Goodwins 1967 cyclical growth model
  • Based on Marxs verbal model in Capital I

38
The Cyclical economy
  • a rise in the price of labor resulting from
    accumulation of capital implies accumulation
    slackens in consequence of the rise in the price
    of labour, because the stimulus of gain is
    blunted. The rate of accumulation lessens but
    with its lessening, the primary cause of that
    lessening vanishes, i.e. the disproportion
    between capital and exploitable labour power. The
    mechanism of the process of capitalist production
    removes the very obstacles that it temporarily
    creates. The price of labor falls again to a
    level corresponding with the needs of the
    self-expansion of capital, whether the level be
    below, the same as, or above the one which was
    normal before the rise of wages took place
    (Marx Capital I Chapter 25 Section 1)

39
The Cyclical economy
  • Marxs model
  • High wages ? low investment ? low growth ? rising
    unemployment ? falling wage demands ? increased
    profit share ? rising investment ? high growth ?
    high employment ? High wages cycle continues
  • Goodwins mathematical rendition
  • Change employment rate growth rate minus
    productivity population growth
  • change workers income share Real wage
    growth minus productivity

40
The Cyclical economy
  • Neoclassical equilibrium hangup a hindrance on
    real progress in economics
  • Cyclical nature of economy can be modelled
  • advanced computer tools exist to do it!

Not to mention advanced thinkers...
41
Political Economy Old and New
  • Political Economy traditionally included
  • Post Keynesians
  • Believe Keynes misinterpreted by Samuelson, Hicks
    et al. in Keynesian-neoclassical synthesis
  • Reject IS-LM, AS-AD interpretations
  • Marxists
  • Continue Classical tradition
  • Most still believe labour theory of value, some
    dont
  • New entrants
  • Ecological feminist economists
  • Focus on issues ignored by neoclassicals ( to
    some extent other schools)
  • Econophysicists

42
Econophysicists
  • Physicists applying tools from physics to analyse
    economy
  • Reject neoclassical economics as based on false
    analogy to outdated 19th century physics
  • E.g. Anyone who has taken both physics
    economics classes knows that these subjects are
    completely different in nature, notwithstanding
    the economists failed attempt to make economics
    look like an exercise in calculus (McCauley
    2004 3)
  • See economics as necessarily non-equilibrium
  • There is no empirical evidence for stable
    equilibrium, for a stabilizing hand to provide
    self-regulation in unregulated markets.
    (McCauley 2004 4)

43
Econophysicists ( mathematicians)
  • Emphasise reality empiricism over theory
  • Our emphasis is on understanding how markets
    really behave, not how they hypothetically
    should behave as predicted by completely
    unrealistic models. (McCauley 2004 xi)
  • Reject neoclassical economics
  • An aim of this book is to make it clear to the
    reader that neo-classical theory, beloved of pure
    mathematicians, is a bad place to start in order
    to make new models of economic behavior. This
    includes the neoclassical idea of Nash equilbria
    in game theory. (McCauley 2004 6)

44
And the last word
  • Goes to Australian econophysics pioneer John
    Blatt
  • The competitive system must not be treated as if
    it should be in, or near, the balanced growth
    state (or, even less realistically, a state of
    static equilibrium). The system, instead, has a
    natural tendency to depart from this state and
    undergo oscillations This conclusion, arrived at
    theoretically, is confirmed by some two centuries
    of empirical observation. It is about time we
    recognize the obvious facts about the system in
    which we live. (Blatt 1983 148)

45
Welcome to Political economy!
  • Here ends the demolition job on neoclassicism
  • Next week, Neil Hart on Post Keynesian economics
  • Ideas in my lectures further developed in
  • History of Economic Thought (if you havent
    already done it)
  • Financial Economics
  • Honours courses in Nonlinear Finance, Advanced
    Political Economy
  • Possibly next year Managerial Economics

46
References
  • Blatt, J.M., 1983. Dynamic Economic Systems, ME
    Sharpe, Armonk.
  • Blaug, M., 1998. 'Disturbing currents in modern
    economics', Challenge!, 41(3) 11-34.
  • Debreu, G., 1959. Theory of Value An Axiomatic
    Analysis of Economic Equilibrium. Yale University
    Press, New Haven.
  • Hurwicz,L.,1986. On the stability of the
    tatonnement approach to competitive equilibrium,
    in Sonnenshein, H.F.(Ed.), Lecture Notes in
    Economics and Mathematical Systems.
    Springer-Verlag, Berlin.
  • Jorgenson , D.W., 1960. A dual stability
    theorem, Econometrica 28(4), pp. 892-899.
  • Jorgenson, D.W., 1961. 'Stability of a dynamic
    input-output system', Review of Economic Studies,
    28 105-116.
  • Jorgenson, D.W., 1963. 'Stability of a dynamic
    input-output system a reply', Review of Economic
    Studies, 30 148-149.
  • McCauley, J.L., 2004. Dynamics of Markets
    econophysics finance, Cambridge University
    Press, Cambridge.
  • McManus, M., 1963. 'Notes on Jorgensons model',
    Review of Economic Studies, 30 141-147.
  • Walras, L., 1874, 1900 1954. Elements of Pure
    economics, George Allen Unwin, London.
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