Economists, Our New Philosopher Kings?

Thursday, November 27, 2008
By James J. Raider

Our mainstream media has been in panic mode for a couple of months, and in its continuing consternation, has clamored for the President Elect to rush, first and foremost, into naming his economic team. “Hurry up, and you better be picking some guys who understand numbers and the economy. We want experts. The best money can buy.”  You turn off the news, and head off to bed confident that although a gloomy, almost mystic storm is brewing outside your window, all will be well. An Economist will figure it out. Some hours later your wake up call is the dawn sending rolling thunder that jolts your home to its foundation. You jump, wide awake, and in a cold sweat. “What the hell is an economist?” The sun is actually attempting to cast light around your drapes.



Once upon a time, “economist” was a term applied to an individual who enjoyed a certain conservative frugality to all human endeavors. Vestiges of that connotation remain with today’s definition, although these cannot be assigned to the modern economist in whose hands we appear to entrust our economic lives, those of our children and those of our grandchildren. Not that some of our more illustrious ancestors might not be addressed today as economists. Certainly Xenophon, Aristotle or Adam Smith wore the mantle well, in addition to being philosophers. Doubtless, each would probably be perplexed by the current definition, and even embarrassed by its most modern incarnation. 



Our best known are too often staggering egos, rooted in analytical methods far from the disturbing notion of public discourse and sensibilities, but readily capable of pontification on the state of everything economic. Aided by the most powerful computational powers the world has even known, they interminably scrutinize the minutiae of fractions, macroeconomically dissecting our lives, creating hypotheses felicitous of one theory, or another that each might have subscribed to. The new breed of economist hopes that the consequence of his or her efforts might eventually dissolve into public policy. All struggle to be heard in one way or another, and a few get lucky. 



Alan Greenspan for example, was much more than lucky. He was feared. He was clearly not as competent as he believed himself to be, but he was feared, as well as venerated. So discombobulated were four American Presidents on the state of their economies that Reagan, Bush Sr., Clinton and Bush Jr. each capitulated, leaving him insulated, permanently ensconced in office as 13th Chairman of the Federal Reserve. For 19 years Greenspan was arguably the most powerful man in the world, if you place money at the top of the human existence food chain.



Who preceded Greenspan? Paul Volcker, who will now be Obama’s eminence grise. 



Aristotles, they are not, but let’s cast a slightly more discerning inspection their way, and toward the state of their art. Economists are human with any of the frailties the rest of us might also endure. They are also products of their educational systems, and environments limited by the very nature of economics.  It is a vast endless field of study. Some concern themselves with wide global movements of goods, people and money. Others might specialize in capital ratios, dealing with banking regulations and interpretations on depository requirements, or the standards of capital and asset risk measurements, with specializations within each area. Others are preoccupied with inflation, and just to complicate matters all countries have individual methods of calculating capital within their boundaries, though they are confined to internationally accepted guidelines. Unfortunately, they either specialize, or they really don’t know anything, and become really, really dangerous.



It was anomalous that a few economists, during the bubble’s inflation, indulged quietly on the more dire economic possibilities, but their squeaks were obscured in the noise of the herd.



We assume that society’s Greenspans can not only be visionaries with insights into mathematical models, but can hover above the fray issuing profound prognostications on the state of our malaise. We assume a dream team of economists crowded around a new Commander In Chief of Change will blend their discordant mix of views into a powerful amalgam. One capable of charting a methodical path out of a labyrinth no one really understands, and no one is taking credit for. 



Repeating platitudes on the perils of assumptions would be pointless. Through the kaleidoscope of our bank accounts we are witnessing the evolution of our own wreckage in slow motion. 



The first clue as to why our modern day Aristotles of economics are not the oracles we sanction them to be, is that they deal with yesterday. They present the past beautifully, and with more clarity than the Hubble’s brilliant and awe inspiring images of distant galaxies as they existed billions of light years ago. As to what will occur tomorrow, or even later today, our seers are particularly inept. Specialization and compartmentalization are dangerous competences, particularly when compromised in insecure egos. 



The second clue resides in the box that hides these enigmatic specialists of the statistical tables. They have perceptibly limited understanding of the nature that is human. The culminating pinnacle of their output is theory. Not practical, but obscure and probably intangible methodologies for hopefully enhancing efficiencies, or exploiting short, mid or long term trends and biases. Nowhere in the mix that is the economist’s alchemy, can we find a scintilla of any universal principals that might inject percepts of morality into their mental and computational gyrations. Their inclinations fall short on the E.Q. meter, and human nature is not in their catalogue of, “Things I’m An Expert In.” 



Now for the third clue. It is not in the nature of the economist to be an entrepreneur. Time spent in research, and analysis also do not allow for long term commercial endeavors. Unfortunately, this limit understanding of where the proverbial rubber meets the road.

The most effective presence at the round table carving a new path out of the maze America is trapped in, would be an entrepreneur. One who has had extensive success in the commercialization of goods or services to the broad market over a sustained period of time. One who has demonstrated vision and creativity, as well as capacities to motivate individuals other than himself to reach unexpected productivity. One who in practice and not through vicarious imaginings, has been drenched in all elements that fuel the economic engine driving an economy.



Drawing the curtains to let the sun’s warmth fill the room, you remain hopeful, but know that as the morning news will announce yet another bailout package, you will look elsewhere for telltales of contemporary Voltaires in our midst.

 

        James  Raider writes  pacificgatepost.blogspot.com

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9 Responses to “Economists, Our New Philosopher Kings?”

  1. 1
    tasmaw Says:

    I like Paul Pilzer’s definition:
    An economist is someone who is very good with numbers,
    but hasn’t got the personality to be an accountant.

  2. 2
    James J. Raider Says:

    tasmaw,

    … you might then enjoy this one:

    “Such a severe depression and banking crisis could not have been achieved by normal civil servants and politicians, it required economists’ involvement.”

  3. 3
    Pete Murphy Says:

    Very well written, James, and so true. And I got a real kick out of the above comment and your reply.

    My biggest beef with economists is that they have a huge blind spot – something that they absolutely will not consider, and that’s the consequences of overpopulation. Since the seeming failure of Malthus’ theory about overpopulation and food shortages and the resulting black eye given economists by other scientists who mocked them for wringing their hands while they went to work and solved the problem (or did they?), economists refuse to ever again consider the subject. That’s a pity because they’re missing the most dominant factor behind so many of our world’s problems.

    For example, if they’d open their minds to the subject, they may see the relationship between population density and per capita consumption, and the effects of rising unemployment and poverty when population density becomes extreme, and what happens when a nation like the U.S. tries to trade freely with one that is grossly overpopulated (which is actually the root cause of our economic melt-down).

    Economists need to get over the whole Malthus thing, stop entertaining themselves with things like “game theory,” and take a hard look at what’s going on around them.

  4. 4
    James J. Raider Says:

    Pete Murphy,

    I agree, unfortunately the subject of overpopulation has become so overwhelmingly politically incorrect, that it has vanished from all media, not just mainstream. It is a concern that should be addressed, as it is one that we inevitably will be forced to confront, and some are already there.

    Note: http://pacificgatepost.blogspot.com/2008/04/overpopulation-earths-challenge.html

    Looking forward to your thoughts on it.

  5. 5
    Pete Murphy Says:

    James, I left a comment to your post at PacificGatePost.

  6. 6
    James J. Raider Says:

    Pete,

    Wow, let me get my coffee and I’ll read it. :-)

    Thanks.

  7. 7
    amfortas Says:

    A woman can do anything a man can, and better. So says a grass-roots philosophy that dominates our western world. So, with Joe Biden having set the political philosophy and providing the wherewithal how about appointing Hilary to the Chairmanship of the Reserve. She’s a ‘housewife’, with all the economic and budgetary skills that are natural to such a role. And she is looking for an executive job. But that’s not all.

    She can put on a blue dress and go looking for a rich country to snare. She has all the ‘natural’ communications skills, conflict resolution et all and empathy with Villages, ‘intuitive’ understanding of ‘differences’ and ‘diversity’ and of course adaptibility. All things that Ivory Tower Economic Philiosophers lack.

    And the country to slide up alongside and seek a cocktail from? And a lift home for coffee or a ’snifter’. One that will buy us all everything we need, so eager are they to get in our pants. China comes to mind. After wooing Hu-ever is in charge, with flattery and a low neckline/hem at high-thigh that exposes just enough to attract the eye (and blame afterwards) for the duration of their five year plan, she can ‘merge’ the two great nations, as in the old fashion of Kings. A Trading Bloc is the usual way of course, but with a human face. Cosmeticised.

    After getting a firm grip on them and their markets she can then sue in the Internatioonal Court for a divorce and sling all the Chinese out, allowing some to visit Shanghai every other Saturday – as long as they bring their wallets.

  8. 8
    julie Says:

    This post is amazing. While I read it, I was thinking and wondering if you had considered this or that but as I kept reading I saw you left nothing out.

    You have a special ability James to understand a person as the whole. And then you have great intelligence and vocabulary.

    What a wonderful writer you are.

  9. 9
    James J. Raider Says:

    julie,

    Thanks for the kind words, and for taking the time to go through the article that might have, in some spots, appeared a little dry. …. And happy parenting in N.Z. :-)

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