This is a blog about economics, history, law and other things that interest me.
Monday, May 23, 2016
Science Fiction and Economics
My friend John McAdams said that he was going to internet stalk me this week. This post is for him.
Random Economic History Stuff
1.
I will be in Montreal this week at the
meeting of the Economic and Business History Society. Here
is the program. I’ll be presenting a paper on “Trust Company Failures in
New York State, 1875-1925.”
Abstract
Despite what appeared
to be lax regulation and rapid growth, trust companies rarely failed. These few failures, however, provide a path to understanding the overall success of trust
companies in New York in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Failures played a disproportionate role in shaping the rules and regulations
that governed trust companies, and the resolution of each failure provided
additional information about how the laws and regulations would be implemented.
These failures shed light on issues of corporate governance and financial
stability that are still relevant today.
2. This
blog made the Intelligent Economist’s list of The Top
100 Economics Blogs of 2016.
Anton Howe’s
Capitalism’s Cradle is another
economic history focused blog on the list.
3.
Pseudoerasmus' blog, which should also be on the list, has some new posts: Did Inequality Cause the First
World War?; Inequality
and the First Globalization, and Economic
History Readings
4. By
the way, for those of you who do not know, Pseudoerasmus is the name of a
person who blogs and tweets, mostly about economic history and development.
Most people seem to assume that that Pseudoerasmus is a pseudonym.
Consequently, some people refer to him as an anonymous blogger.
He recently contributed to discussion about the history of
capitalism at the Junto and published a long blogpost about the Lenin-Hobson
theory of World War I as it appears in Branko Milanovic’s recent book.
Richard Drayton argued with Pseudoerasmus in the comments
section over at the Junto. Drayton concluded his part of the exchange with the
following:
I’m rather intrigued by a
chap, and there’s too much chap coming out of your prose for me to go for
gender neutral pronoun, who spends so much of his time writing aggressive
anonymous critiques of — and these are only the ones I’ve noticed — David
Armitage, Steve Pincus, Ed Baptist, Sven Beckert. These are, or have become,
high profile figures, who have produced substantial original work which has
been widely received and even often forcefully and critically responded to. Why
not publish these pieces with your name behind it? It begins to look rather
mean spirited, even envious, and as if you are afraid to defend your position in
public, or afraid that somehow whoever you are would diminish the respect with
which your opinions are received?
I, on the other hand, am intrigued by a chap who seems so
much more concerned with who people are than with what they have to say. The
last line is the most intriguing. Are
you “afraid that somehow whoever you are would diminish the respect
with which your opinions are received?” What does that mean? Are we
absolved from considering the logic and evidence that someone presents if they
are not a high profile figure? Or, perhaps he just takes the same approach to argument that people like Baptist and Cowie do. All you
have to do is note that someone is an economist (or a sociologist in the case
of John Clegg) before dismissing their argument.
Milanovic’s response
to the blogpost by Pseudoerasmus challenging his interpretation of the cause of
World War I was to retweet it.
Wednesday, May 18, 2016
New Institutional Economics and Economic History
The University of Wisconsin La Crosse has posted several videos of talks given at a conference there on New Institutional Economics and Economic History
JOHN NYE (GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY)
“HUMAN CAPITAL, BIOLOGY, AND INSTITUTIONS” COMMENT: JOHN WALLIS (UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND) |
PHIL KEEFER (INTER-AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT
BANK)
“COME TOGETHER? ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT AND THE CHALLENGE OF COLLECTIVE ACTION” COMMENT: F. ANDREW HANSSEN (CLEMSON UNIVERSITY) |
GARY LIBECAP (UNIVERSITY OF
CALIFORNIA-SANTA BARBARA)
“THE ROLE OF INSTITUTIONS AND HISTORICAL ANALYSIS IN ADDRESSING CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS” COMMENT: F. ANDREW HANSSEN (CLEMSON UNIVERSITY) |
KEYNOTE ADDRESS: LEE ALSTON (UNIVERSITY
OF INDIANA)
“WHERE THE PATHS INTERSECT? ECONOMIC HISTORY AND THE NEW INSTITUTIONAL ECONOMICS" COMMENT: JOHN WALLIS (UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND) |
Friday, May 13, 2016
The Ironic Origins of Libertarianism
From I Chose Liberty: Autobiographies of Contemporary Libertarians
“some liberty-loving soul had donated a copy of John
Hospers’s Libertarianism: A Political
Philosophy for Tomorrow (1971) to my local public library. While I doubt I would find Hospers’s book
impressive today, at the time it was a thrilling read. I had never heard the
“standard libertarian arguments” before. (Bryan Caplan)
“When I was about
thirteen, I decided I wanted to read all of the good books in the public library. …. At the public library I found Ayn Rand; my
grandmother also recommended her to me. Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal had a big
influence on me, as did Atlas Shrugged. Hayek and Rothbard followed shortly
thereafter.” (Tyler Cowen)
“I had some unusual early influences. In the eighth grade I
borrowed an H.L. Mencken book from the
city library. I couldn’t understand why everybody didn’t think and write
like he did. Also, I became enamored of the Barry Goldwater legend.” (Karen De
Coster)
“That experience led me to the public library and a host of books on economics, one of which
was a book whose table of contents I could not understand and which had never
before even been checked out: Mises’s Human Action.” (Robert Formaini)
Friday, April 29, 2016
capitalism, institutions, and history
Related to yesterday’s post, here are a couple of reviews of
Geoff Hodgson’s Conceptualizing
Capitalism by Christian Barrere
and Mehmet
Kerem Coban.
Speaking of Geoff Hodgson (editor of the Journal of
Institutional Economics), I just got an email from Cambridge University Press
letting me know that BRADLEY A. HANSEN and MARY ESCHELBACH HANSEN (2016). The
historian's craft and economics. Journal
of Institutional Economics, 12, pp 349-370 was just published.
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Is capitalism a useful concept?
Thanks to Tom
Cutterham at the Junto for blogging about the Capitalism and Slavery
session at the meeting of the Organization of American Historians.
I have been very critical of the “New History of Capitalism”
NHC, which is the label that has been applied to much of the recent work in
this area. Mostly, I have criticized it because it is bad history. The worst
problems are that they tend to provide misleading historiography and simply
make things up. The description of Beckert’s talk doesn’t do anything to
alleviate these concerns.
It is particularly ironic that Beckert should point to “an
active act of forgetting” since that is largely what he has been promoting.
Rather than developing a truly novel argument, Beckert has simply tried to wipe
out the work of earlier historians. The role of force has been prominent in the
work of numerous scholars from Carlo Cippola’s Guns, Sails and Empire, to O’Rourke and Findlay’s Power and Plenty, and even Jared
Diamond’s Guns, Germs and Steel. The
use of force to maximize profits is the essence of Fogel’s analysis of slavery,
which he repeatedly referred to as a dynamic capitalist system. It is not just traditional economic historians
that actively forgotten, John
Clegg and Peter
James Hudson show how Beckert and Baptist also disregard the work of
radical scholars.
The work of Edward Baptist is built on an even more
misleading myth, the myth that he is telling the half that has never been told.
Rather than responding to criticisms of his argument and evidence claims that
people who disagree with him refuse to accept the legitimacy of slave
testimony. Ed Baptist speaks for the enslaved, like the Lorax speaks for the
trees. If you disagree with him you are denying the voice of enslaved people.
The fundamental problem with Baptist’s claim is that the story has been told.
Unlike the trees, enslaved people spoke for themselves. Charles Ball and Solomon Northrup don’t need to be filtered through Baptist. The half has been told. If
you haven’t heard it, it’s because you chose not to listen until a professor at
a prestigious university said it. Moreover, the economic historians that disagree with Baptist have not at any point rejected the statements of former slaves about the brutality of slaveholders. Their arguments are premised on the belief that enslaved people were brutally beaten to force them to work at maximum effort. Instead they argue that these accounts by former slaves to not provide evidence that increases in productivity were the result of improvements in torture that led to improvements in picking techniques over time.
Even if the most prominent authors in this field were not
doing really bad history, one can question the extent to which capitalism is a
useful construct for analysis. In this regard, Caitlin Rosenthal’s attempt to
define capitalism is an interesting development among new historians of
capitalism and I am curious to see how it plays out. It is new development because
to the extent that other historians follow her, I think it will force people to
confront the more fundamental question: Is capitalism a useful concept for the
analysis of societies?
Up to this point NHC have acted as if it is, but it is not
clear to me that the work supports this conclusion. Beckert provides a good
illustration of the problem. Beckert asserts that capitalism is not necessarily
characterized by the things people normally associate with it: wage labor, markets and contracts, property
rights, and the rule of law. Sometimes it is associated with these things, but sometimes
it is not. There are different capitalisms with different characteristics. But
what makes a system capitalist as opposed to something else? When discussing the expansion of cotton
production in the Soviet Union, he explains that “Such recourse to the state in
postcolonial and postcapitalist societies was not a return to the war
capitalism of the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, but a sharpening
of the tools and an enhancing of the methods of industrial capitalism.” (page
436) If the Soviet Union provides an illustration of industrial capitalism I’m
left wondering if there is anything that is not capitalism. And if everything
is capitalism what does the concept add to our understanding? Rather than using
it as a tool, Beckert seems to toss the word capitalism in every once and a
while, occasionally changing the adjective in front of it, to add a little
flavor to the dish. I think it is this
sort of use of capitalism that prompted Lou
Galambos to suggest that the NHC was primarily a clever marketing ploy.
Personally, I am skeptical of the extent to which capitalism
can be a useful analytical concept. Economists, economic historians, and
business historians do not seem to me to have had much success with it as a
tool for analysis. Economics departments used to frequently have courses on
Comparative Economic Systems, which were largely about comparing capitalism and
socialism. Even before the fall of the Soviet Union and China’s turn toward
markets these courses seemed to be running into a dead end. The differences
among the capitalist and socialist countries often seemed more relevant the
similarities. Economists generally turned to the analysis of specific
institutions, rather than trying to classify entire systems. It seems to me that much of the recent work
in economic history has tended to undermine simple notions about capitalism. Things
like individualism and private property seem to predate what had been thought
of as the emergence of capitalism in England, and a lot of work since Pomeranz Great Divergence has challenged
conventional notions about the significant differences between the West and the
Rest.
I am not suggesting that historians abandon the study of
capitalism. Historians can’t really avoid studying capitalism. “Capitalism” is
a term that people have used for a long time to express their beliefs about
certain kinds of economic systems since the early 19th century
(according to my very old copy of Raymond Williams Keywords). To the extent that ideas about “capitalism” have played
an important role in shaping people’s thoughts and actions historians must
study “capitalism.” But, at least for the most part, this hasn’t been what the
“new historians of capitalism” have been doing. The NHC treat capitalism as an
analytic concept. They write as if there is an objective thing called
capitalism that by means of historical analysis they can make concrete statements
about.
Monday, March 28, 2016
Behavioral Whatever
I’m going to start a new discipline called behavioral
physics. Unlike traditional physics, which assumes that objects just fly apart
from each other, behavioral physicists recognize that a phenomenon they call “gravity,”
prevents this from happening. Or maybe I
will create behavioral evolutionary biology based upon the concept of natural
selection, rather than the assumption that everything just stays the same,
which traditional evolutionary biologists rely on. The way a physicist or
biologist would feel reading those sentences is the way that I feel most of the
times I read about behavioral economics.
The latest irritation is an article from the New
York Times about getting doctors to stop over-prescribing antibiotics.
Getting doctors to stop over-prescribing antibiotics is a good thing.
Personally, I worry more about the negative consequences of overuse of
antibiotics than I do about the negative consequences of the overuse of painkillers.
On the other hand, their suggestion that they are able to solve this problem
because behavioral economics has remedied the flaws of traditional economics is
nonsense.
They describe how various attempts to get doctors to stop
prescribing unnecessary antibiotics have failed because they “are all based on
the assumption that physicians are rational agents who will do the right thing
if provided proper information and incentives. But,” they ask, “what if doctors
are a little irrational, like the rest of us? They may over-prescribe
antibiotics out of an unrealistic fear that the patient could eventually
develop complications and need them, or because it is easier than arguing with
a patient who insists on getting them.” The situation they just described is
practically a definition of a rational choice. Prescribing the antibiotic has a
benefit for the doctor (the patient is happy) and no cost to the doctor.
Nevertheless, they go on to explain that “Over the last few
years, our research team has developed several new approaches to reducing
unnecessary antibiotic prescribing, drawing on insights from behavioral
economics and social psychology. These disciplines acknowledge that people do
not always behave rationally and are strongly motivated by social incentives to
seek approval from others and compare favorably to their peers.” I have no idea
what they mean by rational. There is nothing
irrational about being motivated by social incentives or wanting to compare
favorably with peers. One of the characteristics of traditional economics is that economists don’t care what your preferences are, or where they came from.The only thing that is really required for rational
behavior is that you respond in predictable ways to changes in the costs and
benefits of a choice, which brings us to the interventions they introduced.
In one of their interventions “whenever doctors prescribed
an antibiotic that was not clearly called for by the diagnosis, the electronic
health record system asked them to provide a short “antibiotic justification note.””
Wait a minute, did they just say that they increased the cost to the doctor of
prescribing an unnecessary antibiotic, and doctors chose to write less unnecessary
prescriptions. Let me see if I’ve got this straight. As the cost of doing
something increases, other things equal, people will do it less. Thank God for
behavioral economics. If only someone had thought of this before, they could
have given it a name like “the law of demand” and taught it in every principles
of economics course.
Next week, I think I’ll invent behavioral history, which,
unlike traditional history, relies on critical analysis of primary sources. You
can play along too. It’s easy. Take any discipline, x. Identify one of the
primary features of that discipline, y. Assert, contrary to all evidence, that
x does not do y. Claim that the new discipline “behavioral x” does y. Repackage
some standard results from x as startling new results of “behavioral x.”
Monday, March 21, 2016
Stories about economic historians
Here is an article in the Chronicle of Higher Education about Deirdre
McCloskey. I have to say that I feel the same way about Deirdre’s recent
work that Jim Holt does: "She has read the library, and won’t let you
forget it." I am afraid many people no longer enjoy listening to her, even
when she might be right. The problem is less the move away from cliometrics and
toward culture than it is the voice that she chooses to use. Here, for instance
is Noah
Smith’s reaction to McCloskey’s review of Piketty.
This is a long but fascinating story about
the economic historian Nathaniel Leff.
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