Book review: The Logic of Economic CalamitiesPublished on Wed, Nov 25, 2009 at 09:30 | Source : Forbes India Updated at Wed, Nov 25, 2009 at 12:37 Book: Cassidy's book for the most part is the history of economic thought, but with a focus on markets. He structures his argument in three parts. First, he goes over the theories of old world economists like Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Freidrich Hayek, Leon Walras and Vilfredo Pareto, and explains how in spite of inventing the "invisible hand" or self-interest theory, Adam Smith, and indeed even David Ricardo, recommended a healthy role for government. For instance, Ricardo supported bank nationalisation. And in 1848, John Stuart Mill set laissez faire (or the free market theory) as default. The British repealed the corn laws which protected their farmers through a system of tariffs. Keynes's formula reiterated the central role of the state in revving up deflated animal spirits. He himself never thought a silver bullet would solve real-life economic problems. He understood that the model of rational human beings making informed choices does not extend to areas that have high uncertainty about them; for instance, securitised home loan mortgages. He is said to have observed wryly after meeting American followers in 1944, "I was the only non-Keynesian there." This is the most fundamental point in the book, where he shows why older economists like Keynes, Smith or Ricardo understood that economics was an interplay of politics, sociology and quantitative analysis. The elegance of high theory has to be adjusted through pragmatic real-world policies. He points to Harvard economist Francis Bator's 1958 paper, 'The Anatomy of Market Failure.' Bator was no anti-free market theorist. He had popularised Kenneth Arrow's theories that explained why markets generated outcomes that left everyone better off. Yet, in that 1958 paper, he said that there were many areas like monopolies, or the period after an economic bust, where markets did not achieve their purpose. He was ignored and the Chicago School - of "efficient markets" fame - became powerful.
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