Debunking
Economics takes you behind the sanitized, airbrushed view of economics
given by its textbooks, and details the many critiques which have been made
of economic theory by economists, in a fashion which is accessible
to the intelligent non-economist. This site provides my presentations, lectures
and academic papers on economics, as well as supplementary materials for the
book
Debunking Economics. By far the largest resource here is my collection of
lectures on economics and finance that I give
at the University of Western Sydney.
It's been some time since an update! New work (as of July 4th 2007) includes a paper and presentation on endogenous money creation using a "double-entry book-keeping framework" (presented at the ICAPE conference in June 20007 in Salt Lake City, and a presentation on why endogenous money invalidates Walras's "Law" (given at Complex '07 in Surfers Paradise, Queensland).
I have recently established a blog on debt in Australia: www.debtdeflation.com/blogs. My Debtwatch report will be stored there from now on.
My next major academic work will be a book on debt-deflation. An essential part of this will be an explanation of the creation of money and debt. This paper and presentation explain the basic logic, which contradicts the standard "deposits cause loans" theory of money that dominates conventional economics.
Drop the hyphen! For a number of reasons, I'm changing the site name to www.debunkingeconomics.com. Both will work till August 2009, but then the hyphenated link will be shut down. Please update your hyperlinks (note also that most links on this page open in a new window; if you click and "nothing happens", check another open page and the link will appear there).
News
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Academic Papers
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The most recent additions to this site are my 2007 lectures for Honours Political Economy.
Wiley Miller has just published a truly hilarious Non Sequitur cartoon on economics.
ABC Online has published my opinion piece on Australia's debt, "The elephant in Australia's economic living room". Download this PDF file for the story including graphics
Michael Keating, Chairman of the IPART (the Independent Pricing & Regulatory Authority of New South Wales) and a former head of the Departments of Employment and Industrial Relations, Finance, and Prime Minister and Cabinet, has published an article on economic policy in The New Matilda. I have written a rejoinder (PDF).
Private debt is now 152% of GDP (February 2007), with mortgage debt alone equivalent to 80% of GDP, up from under 20% in 1990. The debt to output has been growing literally exponentially at a rate of about 4% per annum since the mid-1960s. Even as a proponent of Minsky's Financial Instability Hypothesis, these numbers shocked me. I can't see how a serious debt-induced recession can be avoided—though the China boom may delay the day of reckoning.
It is an understatement to say that my presentation on the dynamics of money creation at the Kansas City Conference on the 60th anniversary of Keynes's General Theory (September 16 2006) caused some controversy. My thanks to all those who took part. Click here for a commentary.
I recently presented "Debunking the theory of the firm" to a seminar at Queens College, City University of New York. This collates my critique of the neoclassical theory of supply to date, starting with the simple arguments given in Debunking Economics itself, and culminating with the mathematical critique of Marshallian and Cournot concepts of competition recently published in Physica A (See below). I suggest that whoever made the latest edit to my Wikipedia entry consult this presentation and the Physica A paper.
Liam O'Hara, now working for the Australian Treasury, did his Honours thesis at UWS on the mechanics of interest rate targetting by Central Banks, using Australia's RBA (Reserve Bank of Australia) as his case study. His thesis makes a major contribution to understanding why the money supply is endogenous, and Liam has kindly consented to it being made publicly available here.
I have also linked Dennis Feher's honours thesis on the manner in which the economics profession neglected Irving Fisher's Debt Deflation Theory of Great Depressions.
Two co-authored papers have just been published in Physica A: "Worrying Trends in Econophysics" and "Profit maximization, industry structure, and competition: A critique of neoclassical theory". The former aims to help the development of econophysics; the latter aims to end the dominance of the theory of the firm by neoclassical economics (both the strictly false Marshallian and the conditionally true but irrelevant Cournot-Nash model).
I've given a talk on Australia's paradoxical economic performance "Australia: The Platypus Economy" (PDF) to High School teachers and students on behalf of UWS. Here are related New Matilda articles on debt and money creation).
I discussed Australia's private debt bubble on Australian Talks Back on ABC Radio National (August 2nd 2006) .
This site now regularly rates in the top 20 on Yahoo's search engine for economics (it hit No. 6 in mid-June 2006); thanks to all those visitors who've made it that popular, and please forgive the inordinate delay in revamping its tired interface! Hopefully I'll have some time to work on it during Australia's Spring academic semester!
Here is the MP3 (and transcript) of an interview on debt broadcast on August 1st 2006 on ABC Radio's AM.
I am interviewed extensively in the Summer 2006 edition of the Yale Economic Review feature "The Autistic Economist", which details the objections that the PAECON (Protest Against Autistic Economics) movement makes about neoclassical economics.
My critique of the neoclassical theory of the firm, which covers both Marshallian "textbook" theory and Cournot game-theoretic approaches, will be published in Physica A this year. This paper disproves the popular neoclassical fallacy that a firm maximizes profit by equating marginal revenue and marginal cost; the derivation of this result is given in more detail here.
I'm getting a lot of hits from the Amos Web "Economics with a touch of whimsy" website, since they have kindly made Debunking Economics one of their featured web sites this month. If you're coming from that site and want an introduction to my approach to economics, I suggest you first check out my lectures on Managerial Economics, which give a good overview of microeconomics (and to some extent macroeconomics and finance) from an empirical perspective, as well as a theoretical one. Next I would suggest my lectures on the History of Economic Thought.
Nature has published a feature and editorial on the paper "Worrying Trends in Econophysics" (to be published by Physica A later this year) that I co-authored with Paul Ormerod, Thomas Lux and Mauro Gallegati. While we criticise some aspects of what physicists are doing in economics, we all welcome the incursion of true scientists into the muddled world of economics and finance. My complaint, largely, is that they are not doing enough―something I will detail at more length in some forthcoming papers.
My Cricks Lecture talk "Wowsernomics" was podcast on Fourth Estate Radio, along with an interview, on Sunday June 4th. These are my speakers notes (from which I ad-libbed rather than read).
I've provided a commentary on the recent Australian Federal Budget for New Matilda magazine. You'll have to subscribe to take part in the debate, but the text of my commentary is here.
My commentary on JK Galbraith, who passed away on April 28 2006 at the age of 97, was broadcast on Radio National's Perspective program on Monday May 8 at 5.55pm. Click here to download the MP3; and here for the script on the Perspective website.
On May 1st I commented on the inadvisability of the RBA increasing interest rates, given the level of private debt in Australia. Household mortgage debt has exploded in Australia, from 17 per cent of GDP in 1989 to over 75 per cent now. As a result, a 0.25 per cent rise in rates has the same impact as a 1 per cent rise had back during Australia's last speculative real estate bubble was brought unstuck by a huge rise in interest rates. My interest in this area originates in Minsky's Financial Instability Hypothesis, which I explain in fairly technical papers and lectures available on that link.
The latest additions are my lectures in macroeconomics for UWS's Economics Honours students. I'll post each lecture as it's finished; they will remain "draft" quality though until I have a chance to revise them later this year.
The Yale Economic Review, a journal published by the economics students of Yale University, recently interviewed me about the PAECON movement. Click here for my answers to the questions they posed.
My joint paper (with Russell Standish), presentation and relevant programs on the theory of the firm, as presented to the Econophysics Colloquium, (held at the Australian National University on November 14th-18th 2005). This abbreviated paper will be published in Physica A some time in 2006. A detailed exposition of how the equations were derived is promised in the paper; I'll post that some time in July 2006.
Read the article on the Post Autistic Economics Movement (PAECON) in the September 2004 issue of Adbusters. There are also links to the TrueCostEconomics movement and suggestions about how to enliven economics on your campus...
Debunking Economics has been translated into Chinese by Yanli Huo and the China Economic Publishing House. The translated version should be available by March 2006. It will include a preface on China's economic development versus Russia's since 1990, and an epilogue on reactions to the book since its English publication in 2001.
I have added a page on Marx, after I started to receive hits from Wikipedia entries surplus value, & law of value,
An interview with Melbourne radio station 3AW on the privatisation of Australia's once public monopoly telecommunications carrier Telstra. Click here to listen to the MP3 file.
My lectures in a new UWS subject Managerial Economics are available here. Most such courses are watered-down versions of neoclassical microeconomics. My subject instead covers empirical research into actual price setting by firms (which differs radically from neoclassical price theory), Schumpeter's theory of entrepreneurial profits, empirical research into business cycles, a critical perspective on stock markets, and the theory of competitive (as distinct from comparative) advantage.
I have also written some new lectures for the subjects Nonlinear Finance and Advanced Political Economy (these are necessarily more technical in content, but I have tried to make them entertaining as well).
I reviewed (somewhat favourably, to my surprise) Jeffrey Sachs's How to end poverty on Radio National's Booktalk on Saturday July 2nd. The program can be listened to either on-line or via this MP3 file.
6.30pm, September 23rd 2004: Paul Ormerod (author of The Death of Economics & Butterfly Economics) will be speaking at the University & Schools Club (60 Phillip Street Sydney) at the inaugural UWS Heterodox Economics & Finance Seminar. Please click here to reserve a place.
Sydney September 23rd 9.15am: Paul Ormerod will be speaking on ABC Radio National Life Matters. The program will be available in Real Audio format on the day.
This web site complements the book by providing:
Book structure Comments Purchase Contact details Launch
Hugh Stretton, Fellow of the Academies of the Humanities and Social Sciences, and author of Economics: A New Introduction
James Cumes, author of How to Become a Millionaire without really working, and other books
Henry C.K. Liu, Chairman, Liu Investment Group
Don Goldstein, Associate Professor of Economics, Allegheny College
Alan G. Isaac, Associate Professor of Economics, American University
James Dick, Professional Members Division, The Economic Society of Australia
John M. Legge, Associate Professor, LaTrobe University
Jan Otto Andersson, Professor of Economics, Åbo Akademi University, Finland
Geoffrey Fishburn, Department of Economics, University of New South Wales.
I can be contacted on (02) 4620-3016 (Work) or 9310-5609 (Home).
This repeats the "meta" data about this page; I'm curious as to whether placing it here might improve results in search engines.
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