The Great Zaganza
Maledictorian
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2016
- Messages
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the term trickle-down was a deliberate joke on supply-side economics: as Bush sr. said: it's Vodoo economics.
4. Economists are not right-wing as commonly portrayed
On politics, it is correct that economists aren’t all the free-marketeers they are so often portrayed as by the media. At the same time, one reason for this perception may be that economic models incorporate various assumptions that tend to lead to unequal and unfair outcomes. For example, mainstream economists have traditionally aimed to optimise economic growth and paid less attention to distribution, in part because their models make what amount to symmetry assumptions which don’t fit easily with things like extreme inequality. Another concern is that many influential economists have been captured by the financial industry through things like lucrative consulting contracts, one cause of ‘regulatory capture’. For instance, one study found that whenever none of a paper’s authors worked in a business school, it was ‘significantly less likely to be positive on the level of executive compensations and significantly more likely to be negative.’
There is an interesting criticism of economics and trickle down economics and theoretical economists from the Guardian newspaper in the UK. Personally, I think that currency arrangements and trade economics and the principles of international finance are beyond their ability. They don't think of the practical points of cutting social security and they only seem to be interested in house prices and speculation in currency and bitcoin:
https://www.opendemocracy.net/neweconomics/criticism-economics-isnt-dangerous/
In the intervening decade, a massive economic crisis rocked the global economy, and most economists never saw it coming. Nevertheless, little has changed: A new paper from the same publication reveals how economists continue to believe that their science is superior to all other social sciences, such as political science, sociology, anthropology, etc. While there may be budding intentions to appeal to other disciplines in order to enrich their theories (especially psychology and neuroscience), the reality is that economists almost exclusively study—and cite—each other.
Given his status as a long-standing hate figure, the assumption by many of the left is that his agenda was cemented into place during the Reagan and Thatcher administrations in the early 1980s, especially Friedman's well-known view that inflation is solely influenced by changes in the money supply. But very few of Friedman's most cherished proposals were ever put in to practice. Of those that were - such as monetarism - almost all turned into failure.
Trickle-down economics, in its pure form, was never tested. It's just as likely that massive government spending ended the recession.
There is no reason to involve heathen religions!the term trickle-down was a deliberate joke on supply-side economics: as Bush sr. said: it's Vodoo economics.