March 17, 2010





more diavlogs



View Thread Post Comment
BornAgainDemocrat wrote on 04/23/2009  at  09:10 PM
Re: Economics 2.0 (Arnold Kling & Mark Thoma)
Take me to the forum.
View Thread Post Comment
Jyminee wrote on 04/24/2009  at  01:11 AM
Re: Economics 2.0 (Arnold Kling & Mark Thoma)
After listening to this, I'm beginning to think that the idea that macroeconomists can accurately model and predict the future of the economy is total BS. The national economy is insanely complex. It would be like a historian trying to derive a mathematical model for history that could predict the future based on the past--clearly impossible.
View Thread Post Comment
gregransom wrote on 04/24/2009  at  01:32 AM
Re: Economics 2.0 (Arnold Kling & Mark Thoma)
Arnold & Mark independently rediscover Friedrich Hayek's misdirection of investment and heterogeneous labor explanation of the artificial boom & inevitable bust cycle at 26:10 in the conversation.
Their criticism of a "physics" model of the mathematical relations between non-micro grounded aggregates comes to the same conclusion Hayek argued for between the 1920s and the 1980s -- including in his Nobel Prize lecture "The Pretense of Knowledge".
The problems with "incomes policy", the cost inflation model and the rest of the 1950s / 1960s Keynesian scheme wer discussed already in 1972 by Shuda Shenoy in her excellent introduction to the 1972 collections of writings by Hayek on Keynes and Keynesian economics titled "A Tiger by the Tail".
The "New Classical" information macroeconomics that Arnold and Mark rightly criticize was Robert Lucas's misfired attempt to re-introduce the microeconomics of knowledge and expectations coordination that Lucas had found in Hayek's macroeconomics, but in a way that satisfied the non-micro ground aggregates used by the Keynesians and the Monetarists.
As a matter of historical fact, Hayek's misinvestment theory was the beginnings of the "information" economics revolution, Hayek brought his thinking about the coordination
read more . . .
View Thread Post Comment
breadcrust wrote on 04/24/2009  at  07:30 AM
Re: Economics 2.0 (Arnold Kling & Mark Thoma)
As a matter of historical fact, Hayek's misinvestment (sic) theory was the beginnings of the "information" economics revolution
Wasn't his work on this an extension of Mises'? As far as I can tell, Austrian economics hasn't changed much since the 30s or 40s, and the idea that business cycles were the result of (primarily central bank induced) mal-investment was covered by Mises first.
View Thread Post Comment
nikkibong wrote on 04/24/2009  at  11:43 AM
Re: Economics 2.0 (Arnold Kling & Mark Thoma)
Quoting Jyminee: It would be like a historian trying to derive a mathematical model for history that could predict the future based on the past--clearly impossible.
Ever read Das Kapital?
View Thread Post Comment
nikkibong wrote on 04/24/2009  at  12:06 PM
Re: Economics 2.0 (Arnold Kling & Mark Thoma)
Quoting Thanks, dad!: dan, do you have any books that don't suck?
do you have any posts that don't suck?
View Thread Post Comment
Jyminee wrote on 04/24/2009  at  12:31 PM
Re: Economics 2.0 (Arnold Kling & Mark Thoma)
No--what does it predict about history? The proletariat have yet to lose their false consciousness and seize the means of production from the bourgeoisie...
View Thread Post Comment
nikkibong wrote on 04/24/2009  at  12:42 PM
Re: Economics 2.0 (Arnold Kling & Mark Thoma)
Quoting Jyminee: No--what does it predict about history? The proletariat have yet to lose their false consciousness and seize the means of production from the bourgeoisie...
But it is inevitable that they will lose their false consciousness due to "heightened contradictions" and the eventual paucity of markets to expand into. Marx argues that it is simply inevitable that capitalism will destroy itself.
At least that's the incredibly simplified Nikkibong's Notes version of the 500 page tome.
View Thread Post Comment
Thanks, dad! wrote on 04/24/2009  at  12:55 PM
Re: Economics 2.0 (Arnold Kling & Mark Thoma)
ahhh, defending a spammer! at least that's 100% less boring than the rest of your posts are
View Thread Post Comment
bkjazfan wrote on 04/24/2009  at  02:31 PM
Re: Economics 2.0 (Arnold Kling & Mark Thoma)
Fine discussion even thoough I didn't understand much of it due to never taking a course in business or economics. Listening to these 2 diavloggers gave me the impression the government doesn't have all the answers to what ails this economy.
I can't get away from the feeling that life as we know it in the U.S. is changing for the worse in the money area and the government doesn't have the proper amount of life preservers to save everyone. Granted, I see the various levels of governement doing quite a bit to help the poor and needy but there just seem to be so many slipping through the cracks which are widening.
John
View Thread Post Comment
nojp wrote on 04/25/2009  at  03:33 PM
Economics 2.0
No one ever brings up the fact that productivity is up HUGE since 1975
but wages are flat to sloping down
so the money went to the 1% at the top
and now the economy is suffering ...why?
by definition the rich save there money instead of spend it.
View Thread Post Comment
breadcrust wrote on 04/26/2009  at  08:19 AM
Re: Economics 2.0 (Arnold Kling & Mark Thoma)
Quoting nikkibong: But it is inevitable that they will lose their false consciousness due to "heightened contradictions" and the eventual paucity of markets to expand into. Marx argues that it is simply inevitable that capitalism will destroy itself.
At least that's the incredibly simplified Nikkibong's Notes version of the 500 page tome.
Are you saying this is correct? Mises predicted the fall of the Soviet Union in direct contradiction to socialists the world over who thought its central planning was scientific and guaranteed the best outcomes.
About 40% of GDP is spent by the various US governments and I don't know what percentage it has to reach before socialists reach the conclusion that the US isn't really a capitalist country.
View Thread Post Comment
NateS wrote on 04/28/2009  at  12:04 AM
Re: Economics 2.0 (Arnold Kling & Mark Thoma)
Do you mean inflation adjusted wages? I think you can blame that on... inflation.




uncle ebeneezer: We know how you feel, Mike! 

bjkeefe: Hear, hear! 

uncle ebeneezer: What does it really mean? 

uncle ebeneezer: Is Tom purposely trying to steer interest away from his profession? 

themightypuck: Bob the Baptist comes out. 

uncle ebeneezer: Will formulates a scenario where the terrorists, literally, win! 

sapeye: Hmmm, is Bob guilty of serious stereotyping? 

Stapler Malone: No, Bob. It’s not. Nothing ever is.  

d7greene: Lawrence Lessig knows a juice-boxer when he sees one. 

Toryentalist: Matt is great, Matt is great—listen and repeat. 

thouartgob: Joel’s elegant refutation of Bob’s point. 

uncle ebeneezer: George Johnson, hopeless romantic! 

themightypuck: Robert Wright, Asteroid Cowboy. 

bjkeefe: Spelling is fun-damental! 

nikkibong: The joy of taking stuff out of context. 

bjkeefe: Who stole Matthew’s tie? 

uncle ebeneezer: The Art of Subtlety. 

bjkeefe: Heather slaps the entire BhTV community. 

bjkeefe: Can anyone find a case where this is not ultimately Mickey's advice to Dems? 

Ken Davis: The racial blind taste test. 

Stapler Malone: Go forward, not backward; upward not forward; and always twirling, twirling, twirling towards freedom.... 

Simon Willard: Bob steps outside himself here. 

JonIrenicus: Puzzle spelled out. 

uncle ebeneezer: George's response here was absolutely priceless. 

graz: Bob takes Tom Jones down a peg. 

podcasts

audio (iTunes)
audio (other feed)
video (iTunes)
video (other feed)

follow us

RSS
Facebook
Twitter

store


Buy Bloggingheads T-shirts and mugs at CafePress

mailing list

Get a notification when a new diavlog is posted

contact

Send your questions or comments to