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"Why we need maths in economics"

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Lagrange multiplier posted on Sat, Oct 9 2010 4:03 PM

http://stickmanscorral.blogspot.com/2010/10/why-we-need-maths-in-economics.html

"I'm not a fan of Murray Rothbard." -- David D. Friedman

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I'm not sure what your point is.

I'm coming from the ongoing general debate on the issue that I've seen over the years.  This is the one issue with Austrians that I haven't been able to settle.  It isn't good to be talking about rejecting math even if that does have some esoteric meaning.

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@JCatalan,

...concerning a priori versus historicism, the use of math in economics is not a problem of methodology per sé.  Rather, it is a discussion of precision and utility.

Sorry, I don't understand what you are saying.

Do you argue that empiricism is a scientifically valid method of economic inquiry---i.e. that empiricism is a method according to which one may obtain scientifically valid economic theories---i.e. theories which describe that which is universally true of particular real world, historical events?

EDIT:  Nevermind.  See below.

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@JCatalan,

...concerning a priori versus historicism, the use of math in economics is not a problem of methodology per sé.  Rather, it is a discussion of precision and utility.

On second pass, I think you are not arguing the above---i.e.  scientific validity of empiricism.  It looks to me like you are saying that it's ok to use math, as long as one is willing to sacrifice theoretical precision. 

But, if one's economic investigations are non-theoretical in nature, then one is by definition not "doing economics".  That is to say, once one introduces empirics, one is doing economic history.  No?

 

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Economics is 80% qualitative 20% quantitative. So i don't see why the complication with econometrics and stuff like that.

When I did my BS in Economics I found all that stuff meaningless. They fail to predict, asses and improve the economy.

My Ph.D. professor (econometrics specialist) could not predict the real estate market crash while I, a senior college boy DID.

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before i head out, i just want to say the blog's second point about math working to make discussing economics more precise is dead on target and i think the most important contibution math has made to the field.

think of it this way. 70 years ago, you could make a career out of re-interpreting what other economists said. how many articles in that time, for example, have been written on "what keynes really meant"? hundreds? thousands?

these days, thanks to mathematics, there is never any question about what another economist meant because his assumptions are clearly spelled out in the model. they have to be. so we can spend more time thinking about a given economic theory itself and les time trying to figure out what exactly the theory actually is. how is that not an efficiency gain? wink

as a side note, this is also why i personally think more progress has been made in the field of economics in the past 60 years than was made in the entire 200 years before it. of course, that is a personal impression and i have no way of proving it. anyways, fare thee well!

Ambition is a dream with a V8 engine - Elvis Presley

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Bcyclwutztht,

On second pass, I think you are not arguing the above---i.e.  scientific validity of empiricism.  It looks to me like you are saying that it's ok to use math, as long as one is willing to sacrifice theoretical precision.

No, I said math follows the same rules of logic that verbal logic does.  Math, in many ways, is more precise than verbal logic (and I think verbal logic in some ways can be more precise than mathematics, by the way).

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@JCatalan

No, I said math follows the same rules of logic that verbal logic does.  Math, in many ways, is more precise than verbal logic (and I think verbal logic in some ways can be more precise than mathematics, by the way).

Yea, sorry.  I was grunching.  I have since gone back and read your original posts.  I see that you are against the use of "empiricism" to derive economic theory, but not against the use of "math" to do so.

I'm not an expert in methodology.  However, if the use of mathematics is proper for deriving economic theory, why do Mises and Rothbard discuss at length both (1) the distinct desirability of a causal-realistic method; and (2) the distinct UNdesirability of a quantitative method?

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Seems to me this is why Austrian economics (1) is distinct from all other contemporary systems of economic theory; and (2) insists on the importance of an a prioristic and deductive method; and (3) is so damn baller:

Mises:

Natural sciences progress from the less general to the more general; economics proceeds in the opposite direction.  Natural sciences are in a aposition to establish constant relations of magnitude.  In the field of human action, no such constant relations prevail, so there is no opportunity for measurement.  The value judgments which spur men to act, which lead to prices and market activity, do not measure; they establish distinctions of degree; they grade.  They do not say "A" is equal to, or is more or less than, "B".  They say, "I prefer A to B."  They don't establish judgments.  This has been misunderstood for 2000 years.  Even today there are many persons, even eminent philosophers, who misunderstand this compeletely.  It is from the system of values and preferences that the price system of the market arises.
 

The Free Market and Its Enemies, p.  16

 

However, for a full appreciation and interpretation of Mises's statement, I imagine a reading of Epistemological Problems of Economics; and The Ultimate Foundation of Economic Science; and Theory and History would be quite useful*.

*According to Hoppe, the bulk of Mises's methodological work is contained in these three works.  See Hoppe Economic Science and the Austrian Method.

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bcyclwutztht,

We're not talking about methodology.

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@JCatalan

bcyclwutztht,

We're not talking about methodology.

 

  (JCatalan) 

Austrian methodology, at its most basic level, emphasizes the study of causal relationships.  It stresses the importance of objectively studying cause and effect, criticizing empiricism only because cause and effect can be muddled without an absolutely complete view of the facts.  This is why Mises stressed the supremacy of theory over empiricism (in economics); historicism and empiricism are just inferior methods of deriving theory, and oftentimes leads to erroneous conclusions.  This is because, as previously mentioned, it is impossible to gather all the necessary data to paint a complete picture of a causal relationship in economic science.

 ...


I guess it depends on what is meant by econometrics.  If we mean the use of mathematics, it is indeed reliable to derive theory, because calculus is bounded by the same logical constraints as verbal logic.  It just a method that allows for less implied dynamism, and I think a method which suffers from the fact that relatively fewer people can actually understand it.

 

Oh?

 

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@Student

...the blog's second point about math working to make discussing economics more precise is dead on target and i think the most important contibution math has made to the field...how is that not an efficiency gain?

...

as a side note, this is also why i personally think more progress has been made in the field of economics in the past 60 years than was made in the entire 200 years before it.

Surely you are correct, sir.  That is, if marching---to the drumbeat of neoclassical and Keynesian empiricism---to our social and economic demise more efficiently and rapidly counts as progress.  Thank goodness for the maths. 

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^ both the neoclassical and keynesian schools of though were formed before the mathematical revolution in economics. 

Ambition is a dream with a V8 engine - Elvis Presley

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bcyclwutztht,

If you read what you quoted completely, you'll notice the differentiation between statistical econometrics and mathematicsMathematics qua mathematics has nothing to do with empiricism or positivism.  Any problems with mathematics is not necessarily methodological.

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Mises:

"The mathematical method must be rejected not only on account of its barrenness. It is an entirely vicious method, starting from false assumptions and leading to fallacious inferences. Its syllogisms are not only sterile; they divert the mind from the study of the real problems and distort the relations between the various phenomena."

[...]

"As there exist constant relations between various mechanical elements and as these relations can be ascertained by experiments, it becomes possible to use equations for the solution of definite technological problems. Our modern industrial civilization is mainly an accomplishment of this utilization of the differential equations of physics. No such constant relations exist, however, between economic elements.

The equations formulated by mathematical economics remain a useless piece of mental gymnastics and would remain so even it they were to express much more than they really do."

Mathematics Versus Economic Logic
http://mises.org/daily/3540

This article's original title is "Logical Catallactics Versus Mathematical Catallactics." It is excerpted from chapter 16 of Human Action

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I agree with Mises that economic relationships are rarely mechanistic.  The best mathematics can do, in my opinion, is model a simple relationship in a theoretical environment similar to Mises's own ERE.  I think mathematics has been overused, in the sense that it is consistently used to derive conclusions that are applied to real life.  A simple expansion is MV = PQ; Austrians recognize this mechanistic relationship as false.

What I think Mises overlooks (perhaps due to a weak background in economics) is that mathematics is bound by the same basic logic as verbal logic is.  So, the problem with mathematics is one of application, rather than a fundamental difference in the form of derivation.  In other words, mathematical rigour itself might be mathematic's fatal weakness, in that it's rigour makes it difficult (or even impossible) for it to consider the non-mechanistic and dynamic relationships which exist in a market.

The overall conclusion I think we should make is that while the use of mathematics is limited, it is not entirely worthless.  In any case, I have always considered mathematics as a better tool for modelling relationships that have already been derived through verbal logic, rather than deriving relationships from pre-established relationships purely mathematically.  In other words, I have seen mathematics of simplifying theory into a model.  The caveat is that, as outlined above, this can hide the dynamic nature of real economy.

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