| >it's also pretty obvious that (i) most of the most-criticised standard economic axioms existed long before the Koch brothers started spending Except this isn't about who invented the false premises modern economic thought is based upon, it's about who perpetuates them and why. >mainstream academic economics (even right-wing mainstream economics) is openly and increasingly disdainful of concepts like gold standards I wasn't even aware the Koch brothers were pro-gold standard. It isn't mentioned here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_activities_of_the_Ko... A central part of their agenda it is not. >every right-winger's favourite bogeyman Soros throwing an awful lot of money at heterodox centre-left economics Yes, he set up a think tank with noted "leftists" like Paul Volcker and David Rockefeller. The front page on their website right now is an article downplaying inequality. Karl Marx would be so proud. >Probably also (iv) if you're an economist sufficiently motivated by financial incentives to change your entire worldview to suit I doubt there are many of those. If your worldview is so divergent from the standard corporatist neoliberal worldview that pervades the profession you probably won't even go into it in the first place. I have a couple of friends who bailed for this reason at postgrad level. Nonetheless Upton Sinclair's adage that it is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends on his not understanding it is pretty relevant... Note that one of the most cited & praised economists in this thread (keen) for his (actually) heterodox approach was actually made redundant from his university not that long ago. >you go and work for a bank which pays a lot more Obviously. It's a simple jump from state university professor to a trader raking in $1 mil bonuses. |
> Except this isn't about who invented the false premises modern economic thought is based upon, it's about who perpetuates them and why.
Right wing academics at predominantly state-funded academic institutions have obviously promoted a particular economic worldview for the past century and a half because they want to be made redundant, not because they believe in them? I'm not convinced everybody who doesn't agree with your views on the economy is only in it for the money, especially the most influential economists on the right who became recognised and even died long before the Kochs started spraying money around.
> I wasn't even aware the Koch brothers were pro-gold standard.
That says a lot about how effective they are at influencing economics... The Kochs fund the Mercatus Center, pretty much the only academic economics department that takes gold standards seriously. Their much-favoured CATO institute was founded by Murray Rothbard.
> The front page on their website right now is an article downplaying inequality. Karl Marx would be so proud.
The front page on their website carries articles about elite financial networks running the world, disappearing middle classes and where modern macroeconomics went wrong (and yes, an argument for spending tax dollars on poverty alleviation rather than just looking at inequality stats). Obviously this is all part of the conspiracy to promote mainstream economics and the interests of the rich. And Stiglitz and Volcker both taking funding from the same source is a clear sign that economic thinking is entirely dictated by where the money comes from.
As for Marx, it's lucky that literally no economist has ever written anything complimentary about him, although I suppose if they did it must have been for Russian funding.
> Note that one of the most cited & praised economists in this thread (keen) for his (actually) heterodox approach was actually made redundant from his university not that long ago.
Keen's version of events is that the university shut down the faculty because his neoclassical colleagues weren't popular enough and he took voluntary redundancy rather than be a professor on a business course...
> Obviously. It's a simple jump from state university professor to a trader raking in $1 mil bonuses.
Obviously state university economics departments are full of professors who would sacrifice their beliefs for fast career progression and high salaries who just couldn't find anyone else that would hire an economics grad.