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[log in to unmask] (Roger E. Backhouse [ECONOMICS])
Date:
Fri Mar 31 17:18:54 2006
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=================== HES POSTING ======================= 
 
Much of Hammond's editorial makes good sense. Taxonomies 
can distort our reading of the past. The terms 
"monetarism" and "Keynesianism" can, as I have argued 
elsewhere, prove too much of a straitjacket, even when 
considering the macroeconomics of the past 50 years, let 
along a much longer time span. But I think there are things 
missing from Hammond's editorial. 
 
First WHY DO WE USE TAXONOMIES? To make sense of what 
would otherwise be a chaos of details. Hammond is right 
here. But is there perhaps also an element of the 
soundbite? To get cited, you have to be associated with a 
clear-cut position that can be expressed succinctly. 
Attractive labelling, even if oversimplified, is an 
effective route to success in the modern academic world. We 
thus have an incentive to produce simple, dramatic labels - 
much like Hammond's taxonomies. 
 
Second, I think Hammond is  critical of those (eg Blaug) 
he criticises, and too kind to Friedman. He gives two 
examples of how people classify Friedman, yet both are  
problematic. 
 
FRIEDMAN'S METHODOLOGY: the point about classifying him as 
instrumentalist, falsificationist, pragmatist,... is that 
this says something about the epistemological basis on which 
his arguments rest. If Hammond argued that Friedman fitted 
none of these categories, I would not dissent. But he goes 
on to suggest that we have a ready-made label in 
"Marshallian". I agree entirely that Friedman is 
Marshallian, but this does not, so far as I am aware,  
identify his epistemology - it is not in the same category  
as terms such as instrumentalist, pragmatist, realist...  
Moreover, the term "Marshallian" is 
perhaps sufficiently difficult to define that to use it 
raises as many questions as it answers. Commentators have 
been entirely right not simply to accept Friedman's 
description of himself as Marshallian, but to inquire 
further. (Maybe many people forgot important things about 
Friedman when they did this, but that is a different 
matter.) 
 
FRIEDMAN AS A QUANTITY THEORIST: Maybe there are 
difficulties with the precise details of Blaug's 
definition, but if we add a few qualifications, surely 
it gets pretty close to what most people would understand as 
a reasonable definition of the QT or monetarism. As regards 
Friedman, it is all very well citing his statements about 
the endogeneity of the money supply, but much of his work 
makes sense only if the supply of money is, to a significant 
extent, determined by factors that are independent of the 
demand for money - a statement which most people would 
interpret as meaning that money supply should, in many 
situations, be regarded as exogenous. 
 
The passage Hammond cites, and Hammond's use of it to 
question Blaug's definition of the QT, reminds me of 
Tobin's complaint about Friedman's tendency, in debate, to 
avoid the characteristic propositions of monetarism that are 
associated with his name. Notwithstanding quotes like the 
one Hammond uses, one could argue that much of Friedman's  
work makes sense only if he adopts a view something like the QT as 
defined by Blaug. 
 
Back to taxonomies, I would draw from these examples the 
conclusion that even when, as is almost always the case, 
taxonomies do not work precisely, they can nonetheless be 
useful. Blaug's definition of the quantity theory, I  
suggest, is a sufficiently good approximation for many  
purposes. We just have to be careful how we use them. This  
is Hammond's message, even though my emphasis is slightly  
different. 
 
-------------------------------------------------------------------- 
Roger E. Backhouse            [log in to unmask] 
Department of Economics, University of Birmingham 
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