Categories
Economics

[1414] Of Prize in Economics for what design?

Adam Smith’s classical metaphor of the invisible hand refers to how the market, under ideal conditions, ensures an efficient allocation of scarce resources. But in practice conditions are usually not ideal; for example, competition is not completely free, consumers are not perfectly informed and privately desirable production and consumption may generate social costs and benefits. Furthermore, many transactions do not take place in open markets but within firms, in bargaining between individuals or interest groups and under a host of other institutional arrangements. How well do different such institutions, or allocation mechanisms, perform? What is the optimal mechanism to reach a certain goal, such as social welfare or private profit? Is government regulation called for, and if so, how is it best designed?

These questions are difficult, particularly since information about individual preferences and available production technologies is usually dispersed among many actors who may use their private information to further their own interests. Mechanism design theory, initiated by Leonid Hurwicz and further developed by Eric Maskin and Roger Myerson, has greatly enhanced our understanding of the properties of optimal allocation mechanisms in such situations, accounting for individuals’ incentives and private information. The theory allows us to distinguish situations in which markets work well from those in which they do not. It has helped economists identify efficient trading mechanisms, regulation schemes and voting procedures. Today, mechanism design theory plays a central role in many areas of economics and parts of political science. [The Prize in Economics 2007. Nobel Prize. October 15 2007]

Honestly, when I heard of it on Sunday, I thought they were awarding an economic prize to intelligent design: I said WTF?

And honestly again, though the concepts might sound familiar, I had never heard of the field before.

Categories
Economics

[1411] Of unimpressive KLSE, from a global perspective

A graphics from NYT (via):

Fair use. NYT.

A good information the next time the Badawi administration tries to inflate its own ego by pointing at the performance of the Kuala Lumpur Composite Index.

Katak di bawah tempurung.

Categories
Books, essays and others Economics

[1409] Of complexity economics is unconvincing

This is embarrassing to admit but it is only after 10 months that I was able to set my eyes on the last page of Eric D. Beinhocker’s Origin of Wealth: Evolution, Complexity and the Radical Remaking of Economics. The book is one of those literatures that add new perspectives and challenge pre-existing worldview. That, the slightly technical arguments as the author works toward the punch line — hence, slightly dry — and my typical busy-and-lazy excuse are the reasons why I took so much time. In fact, amid Origin of Wealth, I took a pause and began reading Paul Michel Munoz’s excellent Early Kingdoms of the Indonesian Archipelago and the Malay Peninsula. But I am done with Origin of Wealth now. While Mr. Beinhocker’s work is enlightening, I am not quite convinced of the extent of a revolution inside economics, as suggested by the author.

In the book, the author asserts that the field of economics is rapidly looking up to biology, disfavoring physics. Specifically, it calls for a migration from the idea of equilibrium in physics to the biological concept of evolution. This is not the first time such idea has been conveyed. While this is the first time I am exposed to the idea, the wanting to switch track has been out there in public consciousness for at least a decade. It perhaps popularly cumulated to Paul Krugman’s The Power of Biobabble which harshly criticizes “bionomics” as pseudoscience. In the Origin of Wealth, instead of bionomics, Mr. Beinhocker referred to it as complexity economics.

The book starts with an overview of economic history, started from Leon Walras. While Adam Smith popularized the idea of free market, it was Walras, as one of few pioneers of marginalism movement that later led to neoclassical school within economics, whom introduced rigorous mathematics into economics; economics is science because of Walras, and a few fellow early marginalist economists. More importantly, it was Walras that placed economics as parallel to physics with his idea of equilibrium.

From then on, the author starts to criticize mainstream economics, which he refers to as traditional economics; the concepts of equilibrium and homo economicus are his favorite punching bags. He explains how in the real world, mainstream economics fails to describe various phenomena due to its reliance on the ideas of equilibrium and complete rationality.

One criticism that rings in my head even before I picked up the book is the static-dynamic dichotomy. Mainstream models are notorious for its assumptions of static to explain the dynamic real world and the author derides the mainstream for unrealistic assumption. While it is true that mainstream models are static, I do not see how his alternative could replace what he attacks. While I may not be deeply educated in economics as I would like to be, my reading tells me that many of Mr. Beinhocker’s points are being addressed in economics. The author cites a number of economists working seemingly working to dismantle mainstream economics. In truth, those cited, as least the more well-known figures are the ones that are widening and improving our understanding of economics.

He further describes how typical mainstream economics models are simplistic in nature. But models are supposed to simplify the real world, while eliminating irrelevant noise. If one wishes for it to be as complex as the real world, the only model would be the real world and that would be utterly hard, if not unhelpful. Besides, the models are static for comparison purposes. It is static to aid decision making. One would have a hard time comparing dynamics.

Still, those two criticisms are valid.

What I disagree most with his book is the alternative that he offers: a move to complexity economics. The alternative is not convincing at all and it involves a mish-mash of various findings that criticizes the ideas of static models and perfect rationality. There is no concrete “new economics” to migrate to. At best, the new economics might be what Krugman had described a decade ago: biobabble, pseudoscience. Mr. Beinhocker might realize the lack of concrete alternative to mainstream, or rather traditional, economics when he said complexity economics is still evolving and it is hard to see where the movement is going.

Still, there are interesting and enticing points presented in the book. What I like most are the experimental model on inequality and the importance of trust in economic development. This resonates well especially when the question of Malaysian judiciary credibility was first raised recently. Then again, trust is the message put forward by a branch of mainstream economics called game theory. Therefore, it is nothing new. On inequality, it tries to argue that deterministic factors do affect wealth; that I agree. Further, the author writes that the development path is dependent on culture and not on just endogenous trends and factors coupled with exogenous shocks like technological progress. This may violate the idea of political correctness but here, I am in the opinion that political correctness comes second in search for truth.

In all in, Origin of Wealth is a good read through I would advise reading the book in front of a tablespoon of salt and frequent independent reference to the current state of economics. Mainstream economics may have its weaknesses but complexity economics as forwarded by Mr. Beinhocker does not quite offer a solution to that weaknesses. Mainstream and other heterodox economics do a better job in making economics as a whole worth our effort.

If there is at all any serious effort to dump mainstream economics in favor of complexity economics, I would certainly prefer to wait for a proper definition of the latter to be understood first. At the moment, to me, complexity economics is what bionomics is to Krugman.

Categories
Economics Environment

[1407] Of Nobel Prize and climate change

OSLO (Reuters) – Former Vice President Al Gore and the U.N. climate panel shared the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday for work on global warming, and the award committee urged action “before climate change moves beyond man’s control.”Gore and the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) won “for their efforts to build up and disseminate greater knowledge about man-made climate change, and to lay the foundations for the measures that are needed to counteract such change,” the Norwegian Nobel Committee said. [Gore shares Nobel win with U.N. climate panel. Reuters. October 12 2007]

If Al Gore is planning to run for the Presidency, he has a big capital in his bag.

Now, if Nordhaus wins the Prize in Economics…

Categories
Economics

[1405] Of Wal-Mart comes to bury you all with Snapple

Previously, talks on the street had it that Wal-Mart was interested in acquiring stakes in Makro. It did not happen and instead, it was TESCO that absorbed Makro. A year after that, news of Wal-Mart coming to Malaysia resurfaces.

Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister Datuk Mohd Shafie Apdal said yesterday that US-based Wal-Mart Stores Inc and Germany’s Metro AG had applied to open stores in the country and that the Government was still vetting the applications. [Economist: More operators good for hypermarket sector. The Star. October 12 2007]

If the application is approved, two of the largest retailers in the world would have presence in this country. Number one is Wal-Mart of course; number two is Carrefour. But do not be misled by the 1-2 ranking: Wal-Mart is much larger than Carrefour. Even if four of the top five global retailers excluding Wal-Mart consolidate into an entity, Wal-Mart would still be the largest retailer in the world in terms of revenue.

Also, there were rumors that Wal-Mart wanted to acquire Carrefour. But heh, the French would never allow that!

This apparently is made possible by recent market liberalization:

The ban on new foreign hypermarkets establishing a presence in Malaysia was lifted in May, with the ministry issuing permits on a case-by-case basis.

[…]

In April 2002, former Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin banned the setting up of new foreign hypermarkets and imposed restrictions on store sizes, opening hours and locations for those already operating in Malaysia to protect local retailers. [Economist: More operators good for hypermarket sector. The Star. October 12 2007]

With the liberalization, I hope to get my daily supply of Snapple and Snapple caps! They must bring more Snapple into Malaysia!

Yup, yup. The application must only be approved on one condition: amply availability of Snapple! No Snapple, no license!