I thought of all this early last week, when I read an op-ed by a young Harvard economist in the New York Times commenting on the controversial award of the latest Nobel Prize in economics. I am going to reproduce the column in full, for non-commercial use only of course.
Yes, Economics Is a Science
By RAJ CHETTY
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — THERE’S an old lament about my profession: if you ask
three economists a question, you’ll get three different answers.
This saying came to mind last week, when the Nobel Memorial Prize in
Economic Science was awarded to three economists, two of whom, Robert J. Shiller
of Yale and Eugene F. Fama of the University of Chicago, might be seen
as having conflicting views about the workings of financial markets. At
first blush, Mr. Shiller’s thinking about the role of “irrational
exuberance” in stock markets and housing markets appears to contradict
Mr. Fama’s work showing that such markets efficiently incorporate news
into prices.
What kind of science, people wondered, bestows its most distinguished
honor on scholars with opposing ideas? “They should make these
politically balanced awards in physics, chemistry and medicine, too,”
the Duke sociologist Kieran Healy wrote sardonically on Twitter.
But the headline-grabbing differences between the findings of these
Nobel laureates are less significant than the profound agreement in
their scientific approach to economic questions, which is characterized
by formulating and testing precise hypotheses. I’m troubled by the sense
among skeptics that disagreements about the answers to certain
questions suggest that economics is a confused discipline, a fake
science whose findings cannot be a useful basis for making policy
decisions.
That view is unfair and uninformed. It makes demands on economics that
are not made of other empirical disciplines, like medicine, and it
ignores an emerging body of work, building on the scientific approach of
last week’s winners, that is transforming economics into a field firmly
grounded in fact.
It is true that the answers to many “big picture” macroeconomic
questions — like the causes of recessions or the determinants of growth —
remain elusive. But in this respect, the challenges faced by economists
are no different from those encountered in medicine and public health.
Health researchers have worked for more than a century to understand the
“big picture” questions of how diet and lifestyle affect health and
aging, yet they still do not have a full scientific understanding of
these connections. Some studies tell us to consume more coffee, wine and
chocolate; others recommend the opposite. But few people would argue
that medicine should not be approached as a science or that doctors
should not make decisions based on the best available evidence.
As is the case with epidemiologists, the fundamental challenge faced by
economists — and a root cause of many disagreements in the field — is
our limited ability to run experiments. If we could randomize policy
decisions and then observe what happens to the economy and people’s
lives, we would be able to get a precise understanding of how the
economy works and how to improve policy. But the practical and ethical
costs of such experiments preclude this sort of approach. (Surely we
don’t want to create more financial crises just to understand how they
work.)
Nonetheless, economists have recently begun to overcome these challenges
by developing tools that approximate scientific experiments to obtain
compelling answers to specific policy questions. In previous decades the
most prominent economists were typically theorists like Paul Krugman
and Janet L. Yellen, whose models continue to guide economic thinking.
Today, the most prominent economists are often empiricists like David
Card of the University of California, Berkeley, and Esther Duflo of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who focus on testing old theories
and formulating new ones that fit the evidence.
This kind of empirical work in economics might be compared to the
“micro” advances in medicine (like research on therapies for heart
disease) that have contributed enormously to increasing longevity and
quality of life, even as the “macro” questions of the determinants of
health remain contested.
Consider the politically charged question of whether extending
unemployment benefits increases unemployment rates by reducing workers’
incentives to return to work. Nearly a dozen economic studies have
analyzed this question by comparing unemployment rates in states that
have extended unemployment benefits with those in states that do not.
These studies approximate medical experiments in which some groups
receive a treatment — in this case, extended unemployment benefits —
while “control” groups don’t.
These studies have uniformly found that a 10-week extension in
unemployment benefits raises the average amount of time people spend out
of work by at most one week. This simple, unassailable finding implies
that policy makers can extend unemployment benefits to provide
assistance to those out of work without substantially increasing
unemployment rates.
Other economic studies have taken advantage of the constraints inherent
in a particular policy to obtain scientific evidence. An excellent
recent example concerned health insurance in Oregon. In 2008, the state
of Oregon decided to expand its state health insurance program to cover
additional low-income individuals, but it had funding to cover only a
small fraction of the eligible families. In collaboration with economics
researchers, the state designed a lottery procedure by which
individuals who received the insurance could be compared with those who
did not, creating in effect a first-rate randomized experiment.
The study found that getting insurance coverage increased the use of
health care, reduced financial strain and improved well-being — results
that now provide invaluable guidance in understanding what we should
expect from the Affordable Care Act.
Even when such experiments are unfeasible, there are ways to use “big
data” to help answer policy questions. In a study that I conducted with
two colleagues, we analyzed the impacts of high-quality elementary
school teachers on their students’ outcomes as adults. You might think
that it would be nearly impossible to isolate the causal effect of a
third-grade teacher while accounting for all the other factors that
affect a child’s life outcomes. Yet we were able to develop methods to
identify the causal effect of teachers by comparing students in
consecutive cohorts within a school. Suppose, for example, that an
excellent teacher taught third grade in a given school in 1995 but then
went on maternity leave in 1996. Since the teacher’s maternity leave is
essentially a random event, by comparing the outcomes of students who
happened to reach third grade in 1995 versus 1996, we are able to
isolate the causal effect of teacher quality on students’ outcomes.
Using a data set with anonymous records on 2.5 million students, we
found that high-quality teachers significantly improved their students’
performance on standardized tests and, more important, increased their
earnings and college attendance rates, and reduced their risk of teenage
pregnancy. These findings — which have since been replicated in other
school districts — provide policy makers with guidance on how to measure
and improve teacher quality.
These examples are not anomalous. And as the availability of data
increases, economics will continue to become a more empirical,
scientific field. In the meantime, it is simplistic and irresponsible to
use disagreements among economists on a handful of difficult questions
as an excuse to ignore the field’s many topics of consensus and its
ability to inform policy decisions on the basis of evidence instead of
ideology.
2 comments:
Professor,
Notwithstanding the point of your column this week, I look forward to your writings on FDR.
Having read Conrad Black's (a Canadian) lengthy book onto the topic, it would be interesting to read yours as an American. When do you expect to publish.
As a core X'er who has witnessed this great unravelling throughout my life and the various cause and effects of same, I too believe the financial framework created in this era provides some insight into possible methods of stabilization of the system.
It becomes clearer and clearer to me that society is only as strong as the weakest links.
An economic system that benefits the many > only the strong shall survive. This view is a complete 180 degree for me compared to 2008
Unfortunately I think it still needs to get worse before there is a catalyst for it to get better
Professor
Great stuff. Many thanks.
It's really hard to explain why, especially in short compass, but a multidisciplinary approach, to both intellectual, and real world, problems became imperative during just the period that the paradigm for disciplines like economics and history veered toward compartmentalization.
Philosophy, as just another specializing discipline, did a relatively poor job, as well, in exploring difficulties of this type, difficulties for which it had been better placed, historically, to deal.
all the best
Post a Comment