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The economics profession has a lot to answer for. After the late 1970s, the ideas of influential economists have justified policies that have made the world more prone to economic crisis, remarkably less equal, more polluted and less secure than it might be. How could ideas and policies that proved to be such an abject failure come to dominate the economic landscape?

 

By critically examining the work of the most famous economists of the neoliberal period including Alan Greenspan, Milton Friedman, and Robert Lucas, the authors Robert Chernomas and Ian Hudson demonstrate that many of those who rose to prominence did so primarily because of their defence of, and contribution to, rising corporate profits and not their ability to predict or explain economic events.



An important and controversial book, The Profit Doctrine exposes the uses and abuses of mainstream economic canons, identify those responsible and reaffirm the primacy of political economy.
List of Boxes, Figures and Tables

List of Abbreviations

Acknowledgements

1. Prophets and Profits

2. The Contest of Economic Ideas: Survival of the Richest

3. The Consequences of Economic Ideas

4. Milton Friedman: The Godfather of the Age of Instability and Inequality

5. The Deregulationists: Public Choice and Private Gain

6. The Great Vacation: Rational Expectations and Real Business Cycles

7. Bursting Bubbles: Finance, Crisis and The Efficient Market Hypothesis

8. Economists Go to Washington: Ideas in Action

9. Conclusion: Dissenters and Victors

Bibliography

Index
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20 décembre 2016

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0

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9781783719945

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English

The Profit Doctrine
The Profit Doctrine
Economists of the Neoliberal Era
Robert Chernomas and Ian Hudson
First published 2017 by Pluto Press 345 Archway Road, London N6 5AA
www.plutobooks.com
Copyright © Robert Chernomas and Ian Hudson 2017
The right of Robert Chernomas and Ian Hudson to be identified as the authors of this work has been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978 0 7453 3586 5 Hardback ISBN 978 0 7453 3585 8 Paperback ISBN 978 1 7837 1993 8 PDF eBook ISBN 978 1 7837 1995 2 Kindle eBook ISBN 978 1 7837 1994 5 EPUB eBook
This book is printed on paper suitable for recycling and made from fully managed and sustained forest sources. Logging, pulping and manufacturing processes are expected to conform to the environmental standards of the country of origin.
Typeset by Stanford DTP Services, Northampton, England
Simultaneously printed in the United Kingdom and United States of America
To Anwar Shaikh and the late David M. Gordon for cultivating my appreciation for theory in historical context. RC
To Lisa Johnston. For everything. IH
Contents
List of Boxes, Figures and Tables
List of Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
1 Prophets and Profits
2 The Contest of Economic Ideas: Survival of the Richest
3 The Consequences of Economic Ideas
4 Milton Friedman: The Godfather of the Age of Instability and Inequality
5 The Deregulationists: Public Choice and Private Gain
6 The Great Vacation: Rational Expectations and Real Business Cycles
7 Bursting Bubbles: Finance, Crisis and the Efficient Market Hypothesis
8 Economists Go to Washington: Ideas in Action
9 Conclusion: Dissenters and Victors
Bibliography
Index
List of Boxes, Figures and Tables
Boxes
1.1 Economists on economics
2.1 An excerpt from “The Social Responsibility of Business is to Increase its Profits,” by Milton Friedman
3.1 The raging Cajun
3.2 Were-wolf hunger
4.1 Myopic paddling
4.2 An excerpt from Paul Krugman’s “Fear of Eating”
Figures
3.1 US profit rate, percent
3.2 US share of income by quintile
3.3 US ratio of CEO to worker compensation: 1965–2010
Tables
3.1 Energy use per capita
3.2 CO 2 emissions per capita
3.3 Economic growth: percent change in real GDP per capita, PPP
3.4 Poverty rates before and after taxes and transfers: total population
3.5 Gini coefficients before and after taxes and transfers: total population
List of Abbreviations
AEH—Adaptive Expectations Hypothesis
ACA—Affordable Care Act
ACC—American Chemistry Council
ALEC—American Legislative Exchange Program
AEA—American Economics Association
AER—American Economic Review
AEI—American Enterprise Institute
CED—Committee for Economic Development
CFMA—Commodities Futures Modernization Act
CFTC—Commodities Futures Trading Commission
CPSC—Consumer Products Safety Commission
CR—Consumer Report
CCC—Copenhagen Consensus Center
DFA—Dimensional Fund Advisors
EMH—Efficient Market Hypothesis
EPA—Environmental Protection Agency
Fannie Mae—Federal National Mortgage Association (FNMA)
Freddie Mac—Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (FHLMC)
the Fed—The Federal Reserve
FTC—Federal Trade Commission
FDA—Food and Drug Administration
GPS—Global Positioning System
GLBA—Gramm-Leach-Bilely Act
IMF—International Monetary Fund
LTC—long-term capital management
MRI—magnetic resonance imaging
NAIRU—non accelerating inflation rate of unemployment
NEC—National Economic Council
NTP—National Toxicology Program
NFA—New Financial Architecture
OSHA—Occupational Safety and Health Administration
OECD—Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development
PPM—part per million
REH—Rational Expectations Hypothesis
RBC—Real Business Cycle
S&L—Savings and Loan
SEC—Security and Exchange Commission
TSCA—Toxic Substances Control Act
WEF—World Economic Forum
WHO—World Health Organization
Acknowledgements
Like a racing motor car, the Chernomas–Hudson writing combination relies on a crack crew who ably toil away behind the scenes while the authors hog what limelight there is from academic publishing. Fortunately, the good people at Pluto Press have provided sterling service helping get this manuscript from the conceptual stage to an actual book. David Shulman has been involved in this project from day one and has been encouraging, patient, and insightful in guiding it through the entire production process. Robert Webb did a first-rate job of putting the finishing touches to the book. Our copy-editor Jeanne Brady ran a very careful eye over the book, catching many a potentially embarrassing typo. Our thanks to three referees who saw enough worthwhile in our draft to ensure we didn’t make any wrong turns while advising us how to get the most out of our project.
We would like to acknowledge the generous funding assistance of the Global Political Economics Research Fund, which we used to hire Eduardo Regier as a Research Assistant. His careful literature reviews were an important source of information for us.
Finally, we also have the good fortune to belong to one of the very small number of economics departments in North America that contain a cadre of heterodox economists. We have had so many collaborations and conversations in so many places with Fletcher Baragar, Irwin Lipnowski, John Loxley, Ardeshir Seperhi and John Serieux that we often don’t know where their ideas begin and ours ends. Their collegiality and friendship has been an important source of strength, protection and inspiration especially over the last few years when confronted by an environment hostile to our identity as economists. Because of the University of Manitoba Faculty Association – our union, our colleagues in the Faculty of Arts and the Canadian Association of University of Teachers, we all continue to enjoy academic freedom as part of a department of economics.
1
Prophets and Profits

As an economist, I often find myself defending “bad guys”—companies outsourcing American jobs, gas stations gouging consumers with high prices, Wal-Mart undercutting small retailers with low prices, Mexican immigrants sneaking into our country, the Chinese fixing their exchange rate, American companies opening sweat shops abroad, foreign companies dumping cheap goods onto our markets, and pharmaceutical companies profiting off other people’s sickness and misfortune. Sometimes I feel like a defense attorney for economic criminals.
Unlike real defense attorneys, however, I get clients that are mostly innocent. The study of economics provides a cogent defense for these alleged evil doers.
Greg Mankiw (2006)
Despite the enormity of recent events, the principles of economics are largely unchanged. Students still need to learn about the gains from trade, supply and demand, the efficiency properties of market outcomes, and so on. These topics will remain the bread-and-butter of introductory courses.
Greg Mankiw (2009)
From 2003 to 2005, Gregory Mankiw was the chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers for President George W. Bush. In 2006, he became an economic adviser to Mitt Romney, a role he maintained during Romney’s 2012 presidential bid. He is a professor of economics at Harvard and was paid a $1.4m advance to write his best-selling textbook Principles of Economics . Economic giant Paul Samuelson once claimed, “Let those who will, write the nation’s laws if I can write its textbooks” (quoted in Chandra, 2009). Despite student protests at the narrowness of Mankiw’s teaching—in 2011, students walked out of his principles course in protest over his “limited view of economics” (Concerned Students of Economics 10, 2011)—it is this version of the discipline that has been largely taught in classrooms around the United States. As we will demonstrate throughout this book, Mankiw’s unshakeable belief in the efficiency of the market system reflected the dominant trend in the field of economics after the late 1970s. 1
A standard list of economic goals and priorities would include stable growth, price stability, full employment, and the efficient allocation of resources. Some might even add to this list an environmentally sustainable economy and a reasonably equitable distribution of wealth and income. But the evidence suggests that the post-1970s period in the United States can be characterized as one of instability and inequality relative to the “Golden Age” that preceded it. After the 2008 collapse, critics inside and outside economics accused those dominating the profession for the last three decades of behaving like an “ostrich with its head in the sand,” suffering from “groupthink,” and promoting “Zombie” economics. While there is some truth to each of these claims, we believe they all miss the central charge.
We will argue that the economists of this era who rose to prominence (like Mankiw) did so not because of their contributions to the standard list of economic goals, but primarily because of their contribution to corporate profits and the wealth of the business class. An efficient, healthy economy shared by all was never a likely outcome of the policies advocated by those who had the power to assert their own interests. And those possessing that power got their way with the help of the economics profession. This period in American history, including the post-2008 years, has been an unqualified success for the American business class. While economics is ostensibly guided by commitments to scientific rigor and objectivity, this boon to business was the predictable result of the specific policy recommendations of those that came to dominate the profession.
How Do “Bad” Economic Ideas Develop?

The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed, the world is ruled by little else. Practical

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