The Opportunity Costs of Neoclassical Economics

IF 0.3 Q4 ECONOMICS
Frederic Jennings Jr.
{"title":"The Opportunity Costs of Neoclassical Economics","authors":"Frederic Jennings Jr.","doi":"10.46298/jpe.10082","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The notion of \"opportunity cost\" has been neglected in economics. The reason is that any such measure of cost is invisible, unobservable, and untestable. Yet the so-called 'competitive ideal' in neoclassical theory is based on claims of decreasing returns and substitutional tradeoffs in production, consumption and social relations, and therewith an exclusive focus on scarcity in economics. Within this view, collusion is suspect: it raises prices, reduces sales, and so harms social welfare. This is the baseline emphasis of neoclassical microeconomic theory. The opportunity costs of this framework involve a significant loss of perspective on actual economic phenomena, the potential value of which may far exceed that of orthodoxy. Here are several reasons why. First, the real world is interdependent and not decomposable into parts: all we do initiates effects spreading outward forever on everything. Second, our interconnected environment calls for a network or systems conception of economics in which substitution and complementarities coexist in nondecomposable tangles, obviating any institutional claim for the efficiency of competition over cooperation. Third, if all long-term production occurs with increasing returns, then the nature of economic relations solely reflects substitution for physical goods in short-term contexts; all long-term material outputsas well as all intangible tradesexhibit a complementary connection to make cooperation efficient. Fourth, the unbounded character of economic effects suggests an analytical bound derived from our rational limits, since we cannot see the full range of outcomes stemming from our decisions: planning horizons so enter this scene. Such 'horizon effects' suggest another important distinction in economics of 'atoms, bits and wits,' where atoms (the realm of physical things) are only subject to substitution assumptions in the short run, but shift to complementary interaction for all longer horizons. For bits (the realm of transactions involving information and all intangible outputs) and wits (that of horizon effects), both are realms characterized by complementary relations, so also yielding an economics in which cooperative systems are efficient and where competition cannot but fail by restricting output, knowledge and truth, while promoting a myopic culture in a dangerous self-destruct mode. This is the 'opportunity cost' of neoclassical economics: a world hurtling into a self-destructive failure due to its myopic culture spawned by rivalry, blind to its own pathologies and encouraged by an economics dogmatically closed to realistic conceptions due to competitive frames wrongly imposed in complementary realms, such as in academics, ecology, ethics and organizational learning. These costs far exceed the value realized by this approach. The paper explores these failures in more detail and describes the horizonal theory that would have emerged from the 1930s debates on cost had Hicks not walked away from increasing returns and had Hirshleifer not promoted a false 'rescue' endorsed by Alchian in 1968, when he declared decreasing returns \"a general and universally valid law.\" Because of 'The Hicksian Getaway' in 1939-and 'The Hirshleifer Rescue' in 1962a rigid orthodoxy in economics emerged that was resistant to any alternative views, seeing them as a threat to its unearned dominance instead of as an opportunity to engage in new learning. A (supposedly) 'scientific' community was thus transformed to a closed domain of adherents strongly opposed to open debate and discussion. The curious character of this unheralded situation deserves closer attention than it has gotten thus far. That is the primary aim of this paper.","PeriodicalId":41686,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Philosophical Economics","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-02-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Philosophical Economics","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.46298/jpe.10082","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"ECONOMICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

The notion of "opportunity cost" has been neglected in economics. The reason is that any such measure of cost is invisible, unobservable, and untestable. Yet the so-called 'competitive ideal' in neoclassical theory is based on claims of decreasing returns and substitutional tradeoffs in production, consumption and social relations, and therewith an exclusive focus on scarcity in economics. Within this view, collusion is suspect: it raises prices, reduces sales, and so harms social welfare. This is the baseline emphasis of neoclassical microeconomic theory. The opportunity costs of this framework involve a significant loss of perspective on actual economic phenomena, the potential value of which may far exceed that of orthodoxy. Here are several reasons why. First, the real world is interdependent and not decomposable into parts: all we do initiates effects spreading outward forever on everything. Second, our interconnected environment calls for a network or systems conception of economics in which substitution and complementarities coexist in nondecomposable tangles, obviating any institutional claim for the efficiency of competition over cooperation. Third, if all long-term production occurs with increasing returns, then the nature of economic relations solely reflects substitution for physical goods in short-term contexts; all long-term material outputsas well as all intangible tradesexhibit a complementary connection to make cooperation efficient. Fourth, the unbounded character of economic effects suggests an analytical bound derived from our rational limits, since we cannot see the full range of outcomes stemming from our decisions: planning horizons so enter this scene. Such 'horizon effects' suggest another important distinction in economics of 'atoms, bits and wits,' where atoms (the realm of physical things) are only subject to substitution assumptions in the short run, but shift to complementary interaction for all longer horizons. For bits (the realm of transactions involving information and all intangible outputs) and wits (that of horizon effects), both are realms characterized by complementary relations, so also yielding an economics in which cooperative systems are efficient and where competition cannot but fail by restricting output, knowledge and truth, while promoting a myopic culture in a dangerous self-destruct mode. This is the 'opportunity cost' of neoclassical economics: a world hurtling into a self-destructive failure due to its myopic culture spawned by rivalry, blind to its own pathologies and encouraged by an economics dogmatically closed to realistic conceptions due to competitive frames wrongly imposed in complementary realms, such as in academics, ecology, ethics and organizational learning. These costs far exceed the value realized by this approach. The paper explores these failures in more detail and describes the horizonal theory that would have emerged from the 1930s debates on cost had Hicks not walked away from increasing returns and had Hirshleifer not promoted a false 'rescue' endorsed by Alchian in 1968, when he declared decreasing returns "a general and universally valid law." Because of 'The Hicksian Getaway' in 1939-and 'The Hirshleifer Rescue' in 1962a rigid orthodoxy in economics emerged that was resistant to any alternative views, seeing them as a threat to its unearned dominance instead of as an opportunity to engage in new learning. A (supposedly) 'scientific' community was thus transformed to a closed domain of adherents strongly opposed to open debate and discussion. The curious character of this unheralded situation deserves closer attention than it has gotten thus far. That is the primary aim of this paper.
新古典经济学的机会成本
“机会成本”的概念在经济学中一直被忽视。原因是任何这样的成本度量都是不可见的、不可观察的和不可测试的。然而,新古典理论中所谓的“竞争理想”是基于生产、消费和社会关系中收益递减和替代权衡的主张,因此在经济学中只关注稀缺性。在这种观点中,共谋是可疑的:它提高了价格,减少了销售,从而损害了社会福利。这是新古典微观经济理论的基本重点。这一框架的机会成本涉及对实际经济现象的重大丧失,其潜在价值可能远远超过正统理论。这里有几个原因。首先,现实世界是相互依存的,不能分解成几个部分:我们所做的一切都会引发影响,并永远向外扩散。其次,我们相互关联的环境需要一种网络或系统的经济学概念,在这种概念中,替代和互补在不可分解的纠缠中共存,从而避免了任何关于竞争效率高于合作效率的制度主张。第三,如果所有的长期生产都伴随着收益的增加,那么经济关系的本质仅仅反映了短期内实物商品的替代;所有的长期物质产出和所有的无形贸易都表现出一种互补的联系,从而使合作变得高效。第四,经济效应的无界特性表明,从我们的理性极限中衍生出一种分析界限,因为我们无法看到我们的决策所产生的全部结果:规划视野,因此进入这个场景。这种“视界效应”表明了“原子、比特和智慧”经济学中的另一个重要区别,即原子(物理事物的领域)只在短期内服从替代假设,但在所有更长的视界中都转向互补相互作用。对于比特(涉及信息和所有无形产出的交易领域)和智慧(视界效应领域)来说,两者都是以互补关系为特征的领域,因此也产生了一种经济,在这种经济中,合作系统是有效的,竞争只能通过限制产出、知识和真理而失败,同时以一种危险的自我毁灭模式促进短视文化。这就是新古典经济学的“机会成本”:由于竞争催生的短视文化,世界陷入了自我毁灭的失败,对自己的病态视而不见,由于在学术、生态学、伦理学和组织学习等互补领域错误地强加了竞争框架,经济学教条地封闭了现实概念,从而鼓励了世界。这些成本远远超过了这种方法所实现的价值。这篇论文更详细地探讨了这些失败,并描述了20世纪30年代关于成本的辩论中出现的水平理论,如果希克斯没有放弃收益增加,如果赫施莱弗没有推行1968年阿尔奇安认可的错误“拯救”,当时他宣布收益减少是“普遍有效的规律”。由于1939年的《希克斯逃亡》(The Hicksian Getaway)和1962年的《赫施莱弗拯救》(The Hirshleifer Rescue),经济学中出现了一种僵化的正统观点,它抵制任何替代观点,将它们视为对其不劳而得的主导地位的威胁,而不是参与新学习的机会。一个(大概)“科学”团体因此转变为一个封闭的领域,其追随者强烈反对公开辩论和讨论。这种不为人知的情况的奇特特征值得比迄今为止得到更密切的关注。这是本文的主要目的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
3
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信