Abstractions Versus the "Real World":
Economic Models and the Apologetics of Greed
By Prof John Kozy
Global Research, February 13, 2012
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=29270
Economists
build models by subtracting from reality the characteristics they deem
unessential to the economic situations they model. The result is a bare
bones description consisting of what economists deem economically
essential. Everything that is discarded (not taken into consideration in
the model) is called an "externality." So the models only work when the
externalities that were in effect before the models are implemented do
not change afterward. The realm of economic models can be likened to the
realm of Platonic Ideas. Both realms are static and unchanging
throughout all time. Unfortunately the real world constantly changes.
Since externalities are excluded from all economic models and can be
expected to change after any model is implemented, all economic models
necessarily fail. Economists are frauds and economics amounts to nothing
but an apologetics of greed.
In the 1980s, manufacturers of apparel began offshoring their production to underdeveloped countries, one of which was Bangladesh. Economists endorse this practice; they have a model that justifies it.
In the 1980s, manufacturers of apparel began offshoring their production to underdeveloped countries, one of which was Bangladesh. Economists endorse this practice; they have a model that justifies it.
Offshoring
production to underdeveloped nations gives needy people jobs, increases
their incomes, reduces poverty, and expands their nations' GNPs. It
also enables people in developed nations to purchase products produced
offshore at lower prices enabling them to consume a wider range of
things. As a result, everyone everywhere is better off.
Convinced?
Most economists are, but it hasn't worked that way. Everyone everywhere
is not better off—as the whole world now knows. Why?
In
the latter part of the 80s or early part of the 90s, a large retailer
(don't remember which one) thought it would be a good idea to bring an
employee of a factory in Bangladesh to America to see how the clothing
the factory was producing was being marketed to Americans. So a Bengali
woman was selected to represent her factory and brought to America. This
idea didn't work out well. The woman not only saw how the products were
being marketed but how much they cost and she was infuriated. She knew
what she and her coworkers were being paid, about two percent of the
price of the garments. She did not remain silent and was quickly sent
back to Bangladesh. Here is the gist of her story:
She
said she and her coworkers were not financially better off after being
hired by the factory. Yes, the wages were better than those that could
have been earned before, but they weren't much benefit. Why? Because
when the paychecks began to arrive, the local landlords and vendors
increased prices on everything, so just as before, all of their incomes
went to pay for basic necessities. The landlords and vendors got the
money; the workers were not better off, and those in the community who
were not employed by the apparel factory were decidedly worse off. It
fact, it quickly became apparent that the workers were working for
nothing. They did the work; the landlords and vendors got the pay. But,
of course, the country's GNP was better, which is all that matters to
economists who still claim that Bangladesh's economy is improving.
And
although Americans were able to buy the apparel more cheaply than they
could have before the manufacturing was offshored, the American apparel
workers who lost their jobs are decidedly not better off.
Two
conclusions follow from this scenario: employment alone is not a
sufficient condition for prosperity; full employment can exist in an
enslaved society along side abject poverty, and an increasing GNP does
not mean that an economy is getting better. Remember these the next time
the unemployment rate and GNP numbers are cited. Those numbers mean
nothing.
More
than thirty years has now passed and nothing has changed in Bangladesh.
Most Bengalis still continue to live on subsistence farming in rural
villages. Despite a dramatic increase in foreign investment, a high
poverty rate prevails. Observers
attribute it to the rising prices of essentials. The economic model
described above just does not work, not in Bangladesh or anywhere else.
Explaining why reveals what's wrong with economics and why current
economic practices, which have not essentially improved mankind's lot
over the last two and a half centuries, won't ever improve it.
Economists
build models by what they call "abstraction." But it's really
subtraction. They look at a real world situation and subtract from it
the characteristics they deem unessential. The result is a bare bones
description consisting of what economists deem economically essential.
Everything that is discarded (not taken into consideration in the model)
is called an "externality." So the models only work when the
externalities that were in effect before the models are implemented do
not change afterward.
For
instance, had the Bengali landlords and vendors not raised their prices
after the factory was opened, the employees would have been better off.
But the greed of the vendors and landlords was not taken into
consideration by the model. The realm of economic models can be likened
to the realm of Platonic Forms or Ideas. Both realms are static and
unchanging throughout all time. Unfortunately the real world, as
Heraclitus knew, is not static—change is ever-present, "No man ever
steps in the same river twice." Since externalities are excluded from
all economic models and can be expected to change after any model is
implemented, all economic models necessarily fail. Economists are frauds
and economics amounts to nothing but an apologetics of greed. The world
that economists model is imaginary, not real.
Don't
believe that what I have described takes place only in the
underdeveloped world; it takers place everywhere a profit driven economy
exists. I well remember working in Washington, D.C. as a staffer for a
U.S. Senator. One year, a pay raise was scheduled to take effect the
coming January. Shortly after Thanksgiving Day, prices began rising in
all the area's stores. The workers who received the raise were no better
off in January that they were in October. The raise was siphoned into
the pockets of vendors.
Free
market economic conditions create a situation in which vendors always
prevail. In the end, they get all the money. The economy's business is
business and it is protected by the legal system. Because prices cannot
be controlled in a free market economy, vendors can always set them high
enough to get all the money. Economists call it inflation, and the only
way it can be controlled is by reducing the amount of money available
for the taking. Reducing the amount of money available for the taking
reduces wage levels and keeps workers poor. The business cycle is an
excuse business uses to take back any gains workers have acquired. The
American financial industry bribed the Congress to amend the Bankruptcy
code in 2005 even though no financial institution was in any danger of
collapse because of consumer bankruptcy filings. In 2008, the same
financial industry brought down the world's economy, began foreclosing
on people's houses, and forced thousands into bankruptcy. After reading
this article, do you believe that both revising the bankruptcy code and
the financial collapse were coincidental? The whole point of a free
market economy is to take back all the money paid to employees so that
the rich get richer and the poor stay poor. What happened in Bangladesh
happens everywhere all of the time. Humanity is enslaved by these
economic practices but the enslavement is carefully and continuously
hidden. Workers, those whose efforts keep the society functioning and
produce all of its wealth, are mere fodder—farm fodder, factory fodder,
and when necessary, cannon fodder.
As a result,
"most
of the new jobs being created are in the lower-wage sectors of the
economy – hospital orderlies and nursing aides, secretaries and
temporary workers, retail and restaurant. Meanwhile, millions of
Americans remain working only because they've agreed to cuts in wages
and benefits. Others are settling for jobs that pay less than the jobs
they've lost. Entry-level manufacturing jobs are paying half what
entry-level manufacturing jobs paid six years ago.
Other
people are falling out of the middle class because they've lost their
jobs, and many have also lost their homes. Almost one in three families
with a mortgage is now underwater, holding their breath against imminent
foreclosure.
The
percent of Americans in poverty is its highest in two decades, and more
of us are impoverished than at any time in the last fifty years. A
recent analysis of federal data by the New York Times showed the
number of children receiving subsidized lunches rose to 21 million in
the last school year, up from 18 million in 2006-2007. Nearly a dozen
states experienced increases of 25 percent or more."
In
America, just as in Bangladesh, the vendors have emptied the people's
pockets. All economic models can be rendered ineffective by how the
actions of people change externalities. Governments try to restrain such
uncontrolled changes by enacting regulations, but conceiving of
effective regulations that cover all eventualities and that cannot be
gamed is impossible. All market economies motivated by profit are
founded on unfairness as should be easily seen. In any financial
transaction between two parties motivated by profit, one party wins and
the other party loses, because it is mathematically impossible for both
parties to profit at the same time. One person's profit is another
person's loss. So if bettering the human condition is an economic goal,
no economy motivated by profit will succeed in doing it. Unless people
stand up for humanity, most humans will always be slaves. People should
honestly be asked whether this is the world they want to live in. No
economist, apparently, has the courage to stand up and ask. Why is that?
If you know a working economist, please ask her/him!
John Kozy is a retired professor of philosophy and logic who writes on social, political, and economic issues. After serving in the U.S. Army during the Korean War, he spent 20 years as a university professor and another 20 years working as a writer. He has published a textbook in formal logic commercially, in academic journals and a small number of commercial magazines, and has written a number of guest editorials for newspapers. His on-line pieces can be found on http://www.jkozy.com/ and he can be emailed from that site's homepage.