How economics became a religion
Its moral code promises salvation,
its high priests uphold their orthodoxy. But perhaps too many of its doctrines
are taken on faith. By John Rapley
Tuesday 11 July 2017 06.00 BST
Although Britain has an established church, few of us today
pay it much mind. We follow an even more powerful religion, around which we
have oriented our lives: economics. Think about it. Economics offers a comprehensive
doctrine with a moral code promising adherents salvation in this world; an
ideology so compelling that the faithful remake whole societies to conform to
its demands. It has its gnostics, mystics and magicians who conjure money out
of thin air, using spells such as “derivative” or “structured investment
vehicle”. And, like the old religions it has displaced, it has its prophets,
reformists, moralists and above all, its high priests who uphold orthodoxy in
the face of heresy.
Over time, successive economists slid into the role we had
removed from the churchmen: giving us guidance on how to reach a promised land
of material abundance and endless contentment. For a long time, they seemed to
deliver on that promise, succeeding in a way few other religions had ever done,
our incomes rising thousands of times over and delivering a cornucopia bursting
with new inventions, cures and delights.
This was our heaven, and richly did we reward the economic
priesthood, with status, wealth and power to shape our societies according to
their vision. At the end of the 20th century, amid an economic boom that saw
the western economies become richer than humanity had ever known, economics seemed
to have conquered the globe. With nearly every country on the planet adhering
to the same free-market playbook, and with university students flocking to do
degrees in the subject, economics seemed to be attaining the goal that had
eluded every other religious doctrine in history: converting the entire planet
to its creed.
Yet if history teaches anything, it’s that whenever
economists feel certain that they have found the holy grail of endless peace
and prosperity, the end of the present regime is nigh. On the eve of the 1929
Wall Street crash, the American economist Irving Fisher advised people to go
out and buy shares; in the 1960s, Keynesian economists said there would never
be another recession because they had perfected the tools of demand management.
The 2008 crash was no different. Five years earlier, on 4
January 2003, the Nobel laureate Robert Lucas had delivered a triumphal
presidential address to the American Economics Association. Reminding his
colleagues that macroeconomics had been born in the depression precisely to try
to prevent another such disaster ever recurring, he declared that he and his
colleagues had reached their own end of history: “Macroeconomics in this
original sense has succeeded,” he instructed the conclave. “Its central problem
of depression prevention has been solved.”
No sooner do we persuade ourselves that the economic
priesthood has finally broken the old curse than it comes back to haunt us all:
pride always goes before a fall. Since the crash of 2008, most of us have
watched our living standards decline. Meanwhile, the priesthood seemed to
withdraw to the cloisters, bickering over who got it wrong. Not surprisingly,
our faith in the “experts” has dissipated.
Hubris, never a particularly good thing, can be especially
dangerous in economics, because its scholars don’t just observe the laws of
nature; they help make them. If the government, guided by its priesthood,
changes the incentive-structure of society to align with the assumption that
people behave selfishly, for instance, then lo and behold, people will start to
do just that. They are rewarded for doing so and penalised for doing otherwise.
If you are educated to believe greed is good, then you will be more likely to
live accordingly.
The hubris in economics came not from a moral failing among
economists, but from a false conviction: the belief that theirs was a science.
It neither is nor can be one, and has always operated more like a church. You
just have to look at its history to realise that.
The American Economic Association, to which Robert Lucas
gave his address, was created in 1885, just when economics was starting to
define itself as a distinct discipline. At its first meeting, the association’s
founders proposed a platform that declared: “The conflict of labour and capital
has brought to the front a vast number of social problems whose solution is
impossible without the united efforts of church, state and science.” It would
be a long path from that beginning to the market evangelism of recent decades.
Yet even at that time, such social activism provoked
controversy. One of the AEA’s founders, Henry Carter Adams, subsequently
delivered an address at Cornell University in which he defended free speech for
radicals and accused industrialists of stoking xenophobia to distract workers
from their mistreatment. Unknown to him, the New York lumber king and Cornell
benefactor Henry Sage was in the audience. As soon as the lecture was done,
Sage stormed into the university president’s office and insisted: “This man
must go; he is sapping the foundations of our society.” When Adams’s tenure was
subsequently blocked, he agreed to moderate his views. Accordingly, the final
draft of the AEA platform expunged the reference to laissez-faire economics as
being “unsafe in politics and unsound in morals”.
So was set a pattern that has persisted to this day.
Powerful political interests – which historically have included not only rich
industrialists, but electorates as well – helped to shape the canon of
economics, which was then enforced by its scholarly community.
Once a principle is established as orthodox, its observance
is enforced in much the same way that a religious doctrine maintains its
integrity: by repressing or simply eschewing heresies. In Purity and Danger,
the anthropologist Mary Douglas observed the way taboos functioned to help
humans impose order on a seemingly disordered, chaotic world. The premises of
conventional economics haven’t functioned all that differently. Robert Lucas
once noted approvingly that by the late 20th century, economics had so
effectively purged itself of Keynesianism that “the audience start(ed) to
whisper and giggle to one another” when anyone expressed a Keynesian idea at a
seminar. Such responses served to remind practitioners of the taboos of economics:
a gentle nudge to a young academic that such shibboleths might not sound so
good before a tenure committee. This preoccupation with order and coherence may
be less a function of the method than of its practitioners. Studies of
personality traits common to various disciplines have discovered that
economics, like engineering, tends to attract people with an unusually strong
preference for order, and a distaste for ambiguity.
The irony is that, in its determination to make itself a
science that can reach hard and fast conclusions, economics has had to dispense
with scientific method at times. For starters, it rests on a set of premises
about the world not as it is, but as economists would like it to be. Just as
any religious service includes a profession of faith, membership in the
priesthood of economics entails certain core convictions about human nature.
Among other things, most economists believe that we humans are self-interested,
rational, essentially individualistic, and prefer more money to less. These
articles of faith are taken as self-evident. Back in the 1930s, the great
economist Lionel Robbins described his profession in a way that has stood ever
since as a cardinal rule for millions of economists. The field’s basic premises
came from “deduction from simple assumptions reflecting very elementary facts
of general experience” and as such were “as universal as the laws of
mathematics or mechanics, and as little capable of ‘suspension’”.
Deducing laws from premises deemed eternal and beyond
question is a time-honoured method. For thousands of years, monks in medieval
monasteries built a vast corpus of scholarship doing just that, using a method
perfected by Thomas Aquinas known as scholasticism. However, this is not the
method used by scientists, who tend to require assumptions to be tested
empirically before a theory can be built out of them.
But, economists will maintain, this is precisely what they
themselves do – what sets them apart from the monks is that they must still
test their hypotheses against the evidence. Well, yes, but this statement is
actually more problematic than many mainstream economists may realise.
Physicists resolve their debates by looking at the data, upon which they by and
large agree. The data used by economists, however, is much more disputed. When,
for example, Robert Lucas insisted that Eugene Fama’s efficient-markets
hypothesis – which maintains that since a free market collates all available
information to traders, the prices it yields can never be wrong – held true despite
“a flood of criticism”, he did so with as much conviction and supporting
evidence as his fellow economist Robert Shiller had mustered in rejecting the
hypothesis. When the Swedish central bank had to decide who would win the 2013
Nobel prize in economics, it was torn between Shiller’s claim that markets
frequently got the price wrong and Fama’s insistence that markets always got
the price right. Thus it opted to split the difference and gave both men the
medal – a bit of Solomonic wisdom that would have elicited howls of laughter
had it been a science prize. In economic theory, very often, you believe what
you want to believe – and as with any act of faith, your choice of heads or
tails will as likely reflect sentimental predisposition as scientific assessment.
It’s no mystery why the data used by economists and other
social scientists so rarely throws up incontestable answers: it is human data.
Unlike people, subatomic particles don’t lie on opinion surveys or change their
minds about things. Mindful of that difference, at his own presidential address
to the American Economic Association nearly a half-century ago, another Nobel
laureate, Wassily Leontief, struck a modest tone. He reminded his audience that
the data used by economists differed greatly from that used by physicists or
biologists. For the latter, he cautioned, “the magnitude of most parameters is
practically constant”, whereas the observations in economics were constantly
changing. Data sets had to be regularly updated to remain useful. Some data was
just simply bad. Collecting and analysing the data requires civil servants with
a high degree of skill and a good deal of time, which less economically
developed countries may not have in abundance. So, for example, in 2010 alone,
Ghana’s government – which probably has one of the better data-gathering
capacities in Africa – recalculated its economic output by 60%. Testing your
hypothesis before and after that kind of revision would lead to entirely
different results.
‘The data used by economists rarely throws up incontestable
answers’ … traders at the New York Stock Exchange in October 2008. Photograph:
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Leontief wanted economists to spend more time getting to
know their data, and less time in mathematical modelling. However, as he
ruefully admitted, the trend was already going in the opposite direction.
Today, the economist who wanders into a village to get a deeper sense of what
the data reveals is a rare creature. Once an economic model is ready to be
tested, number-crunching ends up being done largely at computers plugged into
large databases. It’s not a method that fully satisfies a sceptic. For, just as
you can find a quotation in the Bible that will justify almost any behaviour,
you can find human data to support almost any statement you want to make about
the way the world works.
That’s why ideas in economics can go in and out of fashion.
The progress of science is generally linear. As new research confirms or
replaces existing theories, one generation builds upon the next. Economics,
however, moves in cycles. A given doctrine can rise, fall and then later rise
again. That’s because economists don’t confirm their theories in quite the same
way physicists do, by just looking at the evidence. Instead, much as happens
with preachers who gather a congregation, a school rises by building a
following – among both politicians and the wider public.
For example, Milton Friedman was one of the most influential
economists of the late 20th century. But he had been around for decades before
he got much of a hearing. He might well have remained a marginal figure had it
not been that politicians such as Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan were sold
on his belief in the virtue of a free market. They sold that idea to the
public, got elected, then remade society according to those designs. An economist
who gets a following gets a pulpit. Although scientists, in contrast, might
appeal to public opinion to boost their careers or attract research funds,
outside of pseudo-sciences, they don’t win support for their theories in this
way.
However, if you think describing economics as a religion
debunks it, you’re wrong. We need economics. It can be – it has been – a force
for tremendous good. But only if we keep its purpose in mind, and always
remember what it can and can’t do.
The Irish have been known to describe their notionally
Catholic land as one where a thin Christian veneer was painted over an ancient
paganism. The same might be said of our own adherence to today’s neoliberal
orthodoxy, which stresses individual liberty, limited government and the free
market. Despite outward observance of a well-entrenched doctrine, we haven’t
fully transformed into the economic animals we are meant to be. Like the
Christian who attends church but doesn’t always keep the commandments, we
behave as economic theory predicts only when it suits us. Contrary to the
tenets of orthodox economists, contemporary research suggests that, rather than
seeking always to maximise our personal gain, humans still remain reasonably
altruistic and selfless. Nor is it clear that the endless accumulation of
wealth always makes us happier. And when we do make decisions, especially those
to do with matters of principle, we seem not to engage in the sort of rational
“utility-maximizing” calculus that orthodox economic models take as a given. The
truth is, in much of our daily life we don’t fit the model all that well.
Economists work best when they take the stories we have
given them, and advise us on how we can help them to come true
For decades, neoliberal evangelists replied to such objections
by saying it was incumbent on us all to adapt to the model, which was held to
be immutable – one recalls Bill Clinton’s depiction of neoliberal
globalisation, for instance, as a “force of nature”. And yet, in the wake of
the 2008 financial crisis and the consequent recession, there has been a turn
against globalisation across much of the west. More broadly, there has been a
wide repudiation of the “experts”, most notably in the 2016 US election and
Brexit referendum.
It would be tempting for anyone who belongs to the “expert”
class, and to the priesthood of economics, to dismiss such behaviour as a clash
between faith and facts, in which the facts are bound to win in the end. In
truth, the clash was between two rival faiths – in effect, two distinct moral
tales. So enamoured had the so-called experts become with their scientific
authority that they blinded themselves to the fact that their own narrative of
scientific progress was embedded in a moral tale. It happened to be a narrative
that had a happy ending for those who told it, for it perpetuated the story of
their own relatively comfortable position as the reward of life in a
meritocratic society that blessed people for their skills and flexibility. That
narrative made no room for the losers of this order, whose resentments were
derided as being a reflection of their boorish and retrograde character – which
is to say, their fundamental vice. The best this moral tale could offer
everyone else was incremental adaptation to an order whose caste system had
become calcified. For an audience yearning for a happy ending, this was bound
to be a tale of woe.
The failure of this grand narrative is not, however, a
reason for students of economics to dispense with narratives altogether.
Narratives will remain an inescapable part of the human sciences for the simple
reason that they are inescapable for humans. It’s funny that so few economists
get this, because businesses do. As the Nobel laureates George Akerlof and
Robert Shiller write in their recent book, Phishing for Phools, marketers use
them all the time, weaving stories in the hopes that we will place ourselves in
them and be persuaded to buy what they are selling. Akerlof and Shiller contend
that the idea that free markets work perfectly, and the idea that big
government is the cause of so many of our problems, are part of a story that is
actually misleading people into adjusting their behaviour in order to fit the
plot. They thus believe storytelling is a “new variable” for economics, since “the
mental frames that underlie people’s decisions” are shaped by the stories they
tell themselves.
Economists arguably do their best work when they take the
stories we have given them, and advise us on how we can help them to come true.
Such agnosticism demands a humility that was lacking in economic orthodoxy in
recent years. Nevertheless, economists don’t have to abandon their traditions
if they are to overcome the failings of a narrative that has been rejected.
Rather they can look within their own history to find a method that avoids the
evangelical certainty of orthodoxy.
In his 1971 presidential address to the American Economic
Association, Wassily Leontief counselled against the dangers of
self-satisfaction. He noted that although economics was starting to ride “the
crest of intellectual respectability … an uneasy feeling about the present
state of our discipline has been growing in some of us who have watched its
unprecedented development over the last three decades”.
Noting that pure theory was making economics more remote
from day-to-day reality, he said the problem lay in “the palpable inadequacy of
the scientific means” of using mathematical approaches to address mundane
concerns. So much time went into model-construction that the assumptions on
which the models were based became an afterthought. “But,” he warned – a
warning that the sub-prime boom’s fascination with mathematical models, and the
bust’s subsequent revelation of their flaws, now reveals to have been prophetic
– “it is precisely the empirical validity of these assumptions on which the
usefulness of the entire exercise depends.”
Leontief thought that economics departments were
increasingly hiring and promoting young economists who wanted to build pure
models with little empirical relevance. Even when they did empirical analysis,
Leontief said economists seldom took any interest in the meaning or value of
their data. He thus called for economists to explore their assumptions and data
by conducting social, demographic and anthropological work, and said economics
needed to work more closely with other disciplines.
Leontief’s call for humility some 40 years ago stands as a
reminder that the same religions that can speak up for human freedom and
dignity when in opposition, can become obsessed with their rightness and the
need to purge others of their wickedness once they attain power. When the
church retains its distance from power, and a modest expectation about what it
can achieve, it can stir our minds to envision new possibilities and even new
worlds. Once economists apply this kind of sceptical scientific method to a human
realm in which ultimate reality may never be fully discernible, they will
probably find themselves retreating from dogmatism in their claims.
Paradoxically, therefore, as economics becomes more truly
scientific, it will become less of a science. Acknowledging these limitations
will free it to serve us once more.
This is an edited extract from Twilight of the Money Gods:
Economics as a Religion and How it all Went Wrong by John Rapley, published by
Simon & Schuster on 13 July at £20.
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