IMPORTANT: If you cite this message, OPE-L policy requires you not to reveal the identity of the author.
You may cite this message only if you do not disclose who wrote it.
|
One thing that attracts me to Marx and the better Marxian
research traditions is precisely their track record of successful
socio-economic predictions. Of course it is also true that Marxian thought
attracts many prophesying dilletantes with skimpy knowledge, who
venture to surprise the world with a few bold forecasts they
just shake out of their sleeve.
At the beginning of the 1960s, both Milton Friedman and Ernest Mandel
predicted that the long boom would end as the 1960s drew to a close, and they
explained why they thought that, namely near-full employment was not
compatible with price stability in the long term. That was a successful longterm
prediction. In the social sciences, generally you can make few accurate and
useful predictions of events beyond 5-10 years, although you can forecast some
long-range tendencies which follow from a particular social structure or
demographic structure.
Many investment and insurance funds employ people with a track record of
successful predictions, and the proof is in the longterm profits they make.
Those people most concerned with making successful economic predictions are also
the people who are most motivated to obtain a realistic and comprehensive
understanding of the economy.
I reject the leftist chaos theory of capitalism, although
admittedly, at times, capitalism can produce chaos. In this sense, I side with
Marx and other authors who emphasize the regularities of economic life. If
everything is just one big chaos, no prediction and no science is
possible. Science begins with recognizing that behind the superficial
appearance of chaos, there are causes and effects.
I do not deny that most economic forecasts are not much better than
astrology (as AG Frank noted). But the reason for that is not that economic
forecasts are impossible, but that the forecasting techniques are very poor. In
particular, the theories and conceptual foundations of economics are very
poor, and economists lack understanding of cause and effect in economic
life. Therefore, economists employ empiricist methodologies and models which
usually lack significant predictive power. Empiricism is useful and
progressive, if it leads to an investigation of experiential data, but useless
if it conflates a causally determined reality with the sense-data gathered about
it.
However, when very large masses of capital are involved,
capitalists get the very best forecasts that money can buy, leaving the
ideological nonsense of economists aside as a means to hoodwink the public. That
is just to say that private property and competition can be a barrier to
successful forecasting, insofar as vital information is kept secret. But when
the "crunch" comes, only the very best predictions are used.
Generally, the ruling classes aim to monopolise knowledge of the future,
but whether they can really do so depends on many factors. Many of the
contemporary elites are rather nihilistic and uncertain, and they subscribe
to mystical, religious and other non-rational theories which obfuscate foresight
to the point that they miss even the most obvious realities. Marxists (if there
still are any) would argue that there is a material reason for that: the
elites have to cope with very complex, highly contradictory realities,
involving numerous conflicts of interest which are difficult to mediate. You can
tell a certain amount of lies to hide your true motivation, but beyond a certain
point that is not credible, and begins to reveal your own self-deceptions and
biases. This situation is reflected in academia, where all kinds of obscurantism
are promoted in the name of "scholarship" and academics are no longer
sure about what the questions are and what needs to be explained.
However, the more assets are tied up in speculative capital, the stronger
the pressure and demand for reliable forecasting grows, and the better the
forecasting techniques will become. It is just that the power of foresight
becomes a commodity that is worth a lot of cash, and therefore it is
increasingly monopolized by people "in the know" who prevent society from
knowing the truth about itself. Hence the phenomenon of "whistleblowers".
Jurriaan |
_______________________________________________ ope mailing list ope@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/ope
- Re: [OPE] estimating the severity and duration of a capitalist economic crisis, (continued)
- Re: [OPE] estimating the severity and duration of a capitalist economic crisis, glevy Sun 23 Mar 2008, 17:29 GMT
- [OPE] estimating the severity and duration of a capitalist economic crisis, Jurriaan Bendien Mon 24 Mar 2008, 12:46 GMT
- [OPE] estimating the severity and duration of a capitalist economic crisis, Jurriaan Bendien Wed 26 Mar 2008, 17:16 GMT
- [OPE] estimating the severity and duration of a capitalist economic crisis, Jurriaan Bendien Thu 27 Mar 2008, 20:38 GMT
- [OPE] estimating the severity and duration of a capitalist economic crisis, Jurriaan Bendien Sat 29 Mar 2008, 12:42 GMT
- [OPE] estimating the severity and duration of a capitalist economic crisis, Jurriaan Bendien Sun 30 Mar 2008, 13:44 GMT
- [OPE] England and Ireland, GERALD LEVY Mon 17 Mar 2008, 13:34 GMT
- Re: [OPE] England and Ireland, Dave Zachariah Mon 17 Mar 2008, 17:03 GMT
- Re: [OPE] England and Ireland, B.R.Bapuji Mon 17 Mar 2008, 17:07 GMT