Beware
Economists Bearing Policy Paradigms
May 11, 2021DANI
RODRIK
US President
Joe Biden's administration has embarked on a bold and long-overdue departure
from the economic policy orthodoxy that has prevailed in the US and much of the
West since the 1980s. But those who are seeking a new economic paradigm should
be careful what they wish for.
CAMBRIDGE –
Neoliberalism is
dead. Or perhaps it remains
very much alive. Pundits have been calling it both ways these
days. But either way, it is hard to deny that something new is afoot in the
world of economic policy.
US President
Joe Biden has called for a vast expansion of government spending on social
programs, infrastructure, and the transition to a green economy. He wants to
use government procurement to rebuild domestic supply chains and bring
manufacturing jobs back to the United States. His Treasury Secretary, Janet
Yellen, is pushing for a globally coordinated increase in corporate taxes.
Jerome Powell, Chair of the Federal Reserve, traditionally the most hawkish arm
of government on price stability, is playing
down inflation fears and
lending his support to fiscal expansion.
All of these
policy changes represent a sharp departure from the conventional wisdom in
Washington. Do they also augur a new economic policy paradigm?
Economic
policies in the US, and the West more broadly, have long been in need of
overhaul. The ideas dominant since the 1980s – variously called the Washington
Consensus, market fundamentalism, or neoliberalism – originally gained traction
because of the perceived failures of Keynesianism and excessive government
regulation. But they took on a life of their own and produced highly
financialized, unequal, and unstable economies that were unequipped to cope
with today’s most significant challenges: climate change, social inclusion, and
disruptive new technologies.
The needed
paradigm change might usefully start with how we teach economics. Economists
tend to be enamored of the power of markets to promote overall economic
prosperity. Adam Smith’s invisible hand – the idea that self-interested
individuals seeking only their personal enrichment might produce collective
prosperity instead of social chaos – is one of the crown jewels of the
economics profession. It also remains deeply counterintuitive, which is perhaps
why economists devote an inordinate amount of time proselytizing about the
magic of markets.
But economics
is not a paean to free markets. In fact, much of economics instruction focuses
on how markets may produce too much inequality, and how they fail on their own
terms of allocating resources efficiently. Perfectly competitive markets that
harmoniously produce stable equilibria are only one possibility among many. The
Smithian model is not
the only one. Still, the
knee-jerk reaction of many economists is to treat well-functioning, competitive
markets as the relevant benchmark for any proposed departure from
laissez-faire.
Fortunately,
a new paradigm for teaching economics does exist. The CORE Project is an online teaching tool and free,
open-access textbook. Two leading economists, Samuel Bowles of the Santa Fe
Institute and Wendy Carlin of University College London, are the visionaries
behind it. But a large group of economists worldwide has collaborated in its
development. Already, it is in use in a majority of university economics
departments in the United Kingdom.
A key
advantage of the CORE approach is that it tackles issues like inequality and
climate change head-on. But the pedagogically more interesting move is that itreplaces the standard benchmarks of economics with
alternative benchmarks that are more realistic and useful. For example, in
contrast to conventional economics, CORE assumes that individuals are
pro-social and myopic, rather than selfish and far-sighted. Competition is
imperfect, with winner-take-all characteristics, rather than perfect. Power is
ever-present in the form of principal-agent relationships in labor and credit
markets, instead of being treated as either diffuse or exogenous. Economic
rents are ubiquitous and often required for well-functioning economies, not
rare or the result of policy error.1
Such a new
paradigm for teaching and doing economics will produce better understanding of
social outcomes. But we should recognize that it will not produce
a new paradigm for economic policy. And that is as it should be.
All of our
previous policy paradigms – whether mercantilist, classical liberal, Keynesian,
social-democratic, ordoliberal, or neoliberal – had important blind spots
because they were conceived as universal programs that could be applied
everywhere and at all times. Inevitably, each paradigm’s blind spots
overshadowed the innovations it brought to how we think about economic
governance. The result was overreach and pendular swings between excessive
optimism and pessimism about government’s role in the economy.1
The right
answer to any policy question in economics is, “It depends.” We need economic
analysis and evidence to fill out the details of what the desired outcome
depends upon. The keywords of a truly useful economics are contingency,
contextuality, and non-universality. Economics teaches us that there is a time
for fiscal expansion and a time for fiscal retrenchment. There is a time when
government should intervene in supply chains, and a time when it should leave
markets to their own devices. Sometimes, taxes should be high; sometimes, they
should be low. Trade should be freer in some areas, and regulated in others.
Mapping the links between real-world circumstances and the desirability of
different types of interventions is what good economics is about.
Our societies
are confronted with vital challenges that require new economic approaches and
significant policy experimentation. The Biden administration has launched a
bold and long-overdue economic transformation. But those who are seeking a new
economic paradigm should be careful what they wish for. Our goal should be not
to create the next ossified orthodoxy, but to learn how to adapt our policies
and institutions to changing exigencies.
Writing for
PS since 1998
184 Commentaries
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Dani Rodrik, Professor of
International Political Economy at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School
of Government, is the author of Straight Talk on
Trade: Ideas for a Sane World Economy.
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