Tomado de: Real World Economics Review
http://rwer.wordpress.com/2013/10/25/undergraduates-at-manchester-university-propose-overhaul-of-orthodox-teachings-to-embrace-alternative-theories/
Octubre 25 de 2013
The Post-Crash Economics Society at Manchester University. Photograph: Jon Super for the Guardian
Few mainstream economists predicted the global financial crash of
2008 and academics have been accused of acting as cheerleaders for the
often labyrinthine financial models behind the crisis. Now a growing
band of university students are plotting a quiet revolution against
orthodox free-market teaching, arguing that alternative ways of thinking
have been pushed to the margins.
Economics undergraduates at the University of Manchester have formed the Post-Crash Economics Society,
which they hope will be copied by universities across the country. The
organisers criticise university courses for doing little to explain why
economists failed to warn about the global financial crisis and for
having too heavy a focus on training students for City jobs.
A growing number of top economists, such as Ha-Joon Chang, who
teaches economics at Cambridge University, are backing the students.
Next month the society plans to publish a manifesto proposing
sweeping reforms to the University of Manchester’s curriculum, with the
hope that other institutions will follow suit.
Joe Earle, a spokesman for the Post-Crash Economics Society and a
final-year undergraduate, said academic departments were “ignoring the
crisis” and that, by neglecting global developments and critics of the
free market such as Keynes and Marx, the study of economics was “in
danger of losing its broader relevance”.
Chang, who is a reader in the political economy of development at
Cambridge, said he agreed with the society’s premise. The teaching of
economics was increasingly confined to arcane mathematical models, he
said. “Students are not even prepared for the commercial world. Few
[students] know what is going on in China and how it influences the
global economic situation. Even worse, I’ve met American students who
have never heard of Keynes.”
In June a network of young economics students, thinkers and writers set up Rethinking Economics, a campaign group to challenge what they say is the predominant narrative in the subject.
Earle said students across Britain were being taught neoclassical economics “as if it was the only theory”.
He said: “It is given such a dominant position in our modules that
many students aren’t even aware that there are other distinct theories
out there that question the assumptions, methodologies and conclusions
of the economics we are taught.”
Multiple-choice and maths questions dominate the first two years of
economics degrees, which Earle said meant most students stayed away from
modules that required reading and essay-writing, such as history of
economic thought. “They think they just don’t have the skills required
for those sorts of modules and they don’t want to jeopardise their
degree,” he said. “As a consequence, economics students never develop
the faculties necessary to critically question, evaluate and compare
economic theories, and enter the working world with a false belief about
what economics is and a knowledge base limited to neoclassical theory.”
In the decade before the 2008 crash, many economists dismissed
warnings that property and stock markets were overvalued. They argued
that markets were correctly pricing shares, property and exotic
derivatives in line with economic models of behaviour. It was only when
the US sub-prime mortgage market unravelled that banks realised a
collective failure to spot the bubble had wrecked their finances.
In his 2010 documentary Inside Job, Charles Ferguson highlighted how
US academics had produced hundreds of reports in support of the types of
high-risk trading and debt-fuelled consumption that triggered the
crash.
Some leading economists have criticised university economics
teaching, among them Paul Krugman, a Nobel prize winner and professor at
Princeton university who has attacked the complacency of economics
education in the US.
In an article for the New York Times in 2009, Krugman wrote:
“As I see it, the economics profession went astray because economists,
as a group, mistook beauty, clad in impressive-looking mathematics, for
truth.”
Adam Posen, head of the Washington-based thinktank the Peterson
Institute, said universities ignore empirical evidence that contradicts
mainstream theories in favour of “overly technical nonsense”.
City economists attacked Joseph Stiglitz, the former World Bank chief
economist, and Olivier Blanchard, the current International Monetary
Fund chief economist, when they criticised western governments for
cutting investment in the wake of the crash.
A Manchester University spokeman said that, as at other university
courses around the world, economics teaching at Manchester “focuses on
mainstream approaches, reflecting the current state of the discipline”.
He added: “It is also important for students’ career prospects that they
have an effective grounding in the core elements of the subject.
“Many students at Manchester study economics in an interdisciplinary
context alongside other social sciences, especially philosophy, politics
and sociology. Such students gain knowledge of different kinds of
approaches to examining social phenomena … many modules taught by the
department centre on the use of quantitative techniques. These could
just as easily be deployed in mainstream or non-mainstream contexts.”
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