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Economyths: Ten Ways Economics Gets It Wrong
 
 

Economyths: Ten Ways Economics Gets It Wrong [Kindle Edition]

David Orrell
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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"This is without doubt the best book I've read this year, and probably one of the most important books I've ever read.... Orrell exposes the rotten heart of economics... There are other books taking on economics, but I've not come across another that explains it so well for the layperson, takes in the credit crunch, totally destroys the validity of economics as we know it and should be required reading for every politician and banker. No, make that every voter in the land. This ought to be a real game changer of a book. Read it." --Brian Clegg, Popular Science website, May 2010

"The author dissects ten fundamental misunderstandings ... Orrell manages to convincingly explain the relevance of these myths and make them understandable, even for laymen, in a wider context." --Handelsblatt

"A must read for understanding the roots of the financial crisis, the severe limitations of the field of economics and what needs to be done to improve our ability to avoid future crises."
--Spyros Makridakis, author of Dance With Chance

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From the failure of wealth to make us happier to the catastrophic blindness to the credit crunch, Economyths reveals ten ways in which economics has failed us all. Forecasters predicted a prosperous year in 2008 for financial markets – in one influential survey the average prediction was for an eleven percent gain. But by the end of the year major economies were plunging into recession. An even bigger casualty was the credibility of economics, which for decades has claimed that the economy is a rational, stable, efficient machine, governed by well-understood laws. Mathematician David Orrell traces the history of this idea from its roots in ancient Greece to the financial centres of London and New York, shows ten distinct ways in which it is mistaken – and proposes new alternatives. Orrell explains how the economy is the result of complex and unpredictable processes; how risk models go astray; why the economy is not rational or fair; why until very recently no woman had ever won the Nobel Prize for economics; why financial crashes are less Black Swans than part of the landscape; and finally, how new ideas in mathematics, psychology, and environmentalism are helping to reinvent economics.

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53 of 59 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
After any great political or sociological phenomenon, the publishing industry's response tends to follow three distinct phases. Firstly, there are knee-jerk accounts of what happened by people who frankly don't have a clue. In the case of the credit crunch the worst include cash-in City memoires by assorted junior traders, and opportunistic accounts by novelists, political science academics and others who barely know their RAVs from their elbows. The second wave includes more considered accounts by more knowledgeable types. These typically take longer to get out because their authors are waiting for the dust to settle/have proper jobs. Here you tend to get books by senior City figures, intelligent financial journalists and so on. These, however, are still focused on describing and explaining what has just occurred, and perhaps offering suggestions for regulatory changes to make them less likely to occur again. Philip Augur's `Reckless' is a good example of this type. Finally, you get the books that put the events into their wider context and suggest some more radical solutions. These can be very variable indeed, ranging from the frankly nutty to the brilliant. `Economyths' is brilliant.

As it happens, I wasn't expecting a great deal from the book. David Orrell isn't an economist, he's an applied mathematician, and he hasn't, so far as I can tell, worked in the City. Books by outsiders, however talented, frequently miss the point, often because they are pushing a political agenda, or perhaps because they just `don't get it'. But I was pleasantly surprised from the first chapter, and by the end I was absolutely converted to his viewpoint. Indeed, is should carry a health warning - read this book and you will never be able to take the claims of classical economics seriously again.

In each of his ten chapters Orrell takes aim at one of the founding assumptions of neo-classical economics, like `Homo economicus' and the efficient markets hypothesis, and knocks them down one by one. Typically he starts by undermining their foundations by showing their questionable origins (usually in dodgy analogies to 19th Century physics). Then he meticulously demonstrates how they distort, fail to represent or contradict the economic data. By the end, you wonder how you ever took them seriously at all.

Easily my favourite chapter was his demolition of the `law' of supply and demand. This is perhaps the one thing that everyone thinks they know and agrees with about economics. Yet, if it was true, markets would always (at least in the absence of catastrophic shocks to supply or demand) self-regulate towards a mean. The mean itself would change only slowly (e.g. with changes in agricultural practice, general wealth or population) and bubbles would be effectively impossible. In fact, bubbles in all sorts of areas are relatively common. Orrell demonstrates convincingly that in certain circumstances market moves operate as `negative feedback' and the `law' holds, in others they operate as `positive feedback' and it doesn't. It's an obvious point, and it's been made before, but rarely has it been made so fluently or convincingly. It turns out that the Gausian bell curve does not represent the typical shape of market movements - at least not stock markets with their heavily speculative character - but instead they observe the fractal `power relationships' visible in, for example, the ratio of earthquake magnitude to frequency. If you're like me you'll be slapping your forehead.

Markets, it seems, are more like chaotic organic systems than the well-regulated physical `machines' that the neo-classical economists would have us believe. And this is where the book ascends above similar attacks on the status quo, into the realms of genius. Too many critiques of the neo-classical, liberal consensus point out plausibly what is wrong and then point vaguely in the direction of a `something' that must be done. For example, we didn't need David Orrell to tell us that `homo economicus' was a myth, and a silly one at that. Anyone who's read the work of Kahneman and Tversky knows that. But that lack of a plausible alternative theoretical framework allows the neo-classical economists to throw them off. We've seen a lot of work recently aimed at tweaking the models to deal with things like asymmetrical information or imperfect rationality.

Orrell recognises that we need a Copernican revolution to sweep away these Ptolemaic epicycles and the discredited theory they are shoring up. Fortunately, with his mathematical background he recognises that maths and physics haven't stood still, and that changes in the fields of network theory, for example, hold the key to a looser but more accurate model - or more likely set of models - that would more correctly describe the behaviour of economies. This doesn't set out a new framework - that would take a long and complex book - but it plausibly shows where one is to be found, and hopefully a new generation of economists will be inspired to fill in the gaps.

This is a book that should be read by everyone. It deserves to be a best seller. I suspect it won't be, though, and the responsibility lies with the publishers. This is a serious, exciting, invigoration and beautifully written destruction of the economic status quo. So, what do they do? Package it in a garish mustard yellow cover with a stupid, cartoonish design so that it looks like it's aimed at children. Even the subtitle ("Ten Ways That Economics Gets it Wrong") doesn't do justice to the scope and importance of this book. So, come on Icon, re-release this with a properly-designed, smart cover, and get it on the `three for two' tables. Your author deserves it. We deserve it.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Must-read 11 Nov 2011
By Chuck E VINE™ VOICE
Format:Kindle Edition
A brilliant critique of the mind-numbing free-market fundamentalist assumptions rife in books like the lamentable 'Undercover Economist'. The criticism that Orrell is 'not an economist' strikes me as a distinct plus. The economics profession has become a latter-day priesthood - or more precisely a series of enclosed orders, all largely espousing the neo-classical faith that Orrell challenges. Even renegades like Paul Krugman can't bring themselves to break with the basic tenets. To progress past Econ 101 (probably based on a textbook by Mankiw), one needs to employ a certain suspension of disbelief in order to swallow the farcical assumptions inherent in The Efficient Market Hypothesis, RATEX (a proponent of which won the latest not-really-the-Nobel-Prize-Prize), Laffer Curves and money-supply extrapolations. To quote Stephen Goldfeld: "An economist is someone who sees something working in practice and asks whether it would work in principle."

Orrell takes a forensic approach to taking apart the pre-Copernican paradigm that has been used to justify the last 30 years of growing inequality and escalating debt that has accompanied the financialisation of the Western economy - an aspect that remains largely unadressed in mainstream texts, which is one of the reasons why mainstream economists profess to have been mystified by what any sane observer could see was an unsustainable credit boom (in the mainstream the fact that every creditor was 'balanced' by a lender brought 'equilibrium').

Even as we stand amid the wreckage brought on by decades of neoliberal dogma, the mainstream remains chained to these beliefs - why is why 'Econmyths' is essential reading for anyone hoping to understand the crisis. Along with Naomi Klein's monumental 'Shock Doctrine' (which is reaching its end-game in Europe), and John Cassidy's excellent overview of 'How Markets Fail', Orrell's book will allow you to make a bit more sense of real world economics against the backdrop of screaming headlines.
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12 of 15 people found the following review helpful
Format:Kindle Edition|Amazon Verified Purchase
This should be required reading for every politican and economist on the planet - especially those who insist that the "free market" knows best. A demolition of the false premises on which neo-classical economics is based and a demonstration of how current economics has no predictive power whatsoever.

How has it managed to survive so long? It's hardly in the best interests of governments and economists to admit they have no real idea what the effects of their policies may have is it? Economics has provided the veneer of rationality for their decisions - although it clearly doesn't work.

Howevever this isn't just a critique of current economic theory. It also borrows a lot of ideas from control theory, system theory and complexity theory to demonstrate how markets display features which are well understood within these disciplines. There's clearly fertile ground here for a complete revolution in economic theory, based on a far sounder footing.
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