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Fri Mar 31 17:18:56 2006 |
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----------------- HES POSTING -----------------
Consider the standards that some set for judging reswitching to be
important.
1. You cannot prove that it has ever happened -- despite Barkley Rosser's
articles.
2. Even if it did, so what.
Then the neo-classicals turn around and say that markets work perfectly,
or almost perfectly. At least nothing can improve on markets.
What scientific evidence can they produce? They can offer case studies --
the USSR disintegrated, Cuba is poorer than the US ....
But these statements amount to anecdotes without some rigorous tests.
The reswitching literature reminds us that capital cannot be measured. We
are dealing with an inexact discipline, not a science, but as Keynes says,
something like dentistry.
Of course, the inability to measure depreciation alone suffices to show
that measuring capital is impossible.
The upshot should be that we should not speak and write with absolute
certainty -- yet that is a tendency common to our discipline --
fortunately, less common with people with an interest in history of
thought.
The California deregulation experiment is a stronger proof/anecdote
demonstrating that markets don't work well, but then people will say that
the deregulation was not complete. Of course, they will not buy that
argument by someone who says that socialism never had a chance to be
complete in the USSR.
Michael Perelman
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