Update (12 July): Mainstream Harvard economists comment. Naturally, none of these three comment on:
- How Amherst economics acquired that tendency (mentioned in the Times’ article)
- Why Harvard won’t allow Marglin to teach a section of the intro course
- Feldstein’s refusal to modify his views on Social Security after finding his “empirical” results came from a computer programming error
- How the thief Andrei Shleifer manages to still be a Harvard economist in good standing
Elsewhere, Max Sawicky points out that he does not develop heterodox economic theory.
I continue to think that you cannot offer a substantial critique of heterodox economics based on what is said about it in this New York Times article.
6 comments:
What's there to understand? The article is nonsense.
Robert, I would believe you, but then I remember your expressed views on Mankiw's "popularization" work.
>> "I continue to think that you cannot offer a substantial critique of heterodox economics based on what is said about it in this New York Times article."
Funny, I thought that the article was meant as a (substation or not) critique of orthodox economics.
There's a "a few lone heroes, willing to face an Evil Empire" rhetoric going on... and the problem people have with this is being called evil and misrepresented.
No one's critiquing heterodox economics (not yet at least), just the article itself.
I'll start. Heterodox economics once shot a man in Reno to watch him die.
Not to mention that heterodox economics is its own granpa.
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