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Unveiling the Cult of Efficiency

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Unveiling the Cult of Efficiency

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Steve Keen considers the following as important:

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Unveiling the Cult of Efficiency
Steve Keen
Steve Keen (born 28 March 1953) is an Australian-born, British-based economist and author. He considers himself a post-Keynesian, criticising neoclassical economics as inconsistent, unscientific and empirically unsupported. The major influences on Keen's thinking about economics include John Maynard Keynes, Karl Marx, Hyman Minsky, Piero Sraffa, Augusto Graziani, Joseph Alois Schumpeter, Thorstein Veblen, and François Quesnay.

4 comments

  1. What do you think about this? Responding to the best comments.

  2. Most people that went to study economics are people that weren't talented enough to study math, physics, engineering or computer science. They lack the so called logical-mathematical intelligence to be good at these disciplines. I entered Mathematics faculty University of Belgrade, I am about to get a job as a software developer, I know my peers who went to study economics and I know the kind of people that went to study math, physics, engineering, CS etc. I like some people that went to study economics, I like them as people, they are good people, but they just don't possess the logical-mathematical intelligence that math, physics, engineering students do posses. I am not saying all economics students are like this, but the trend is too obvious not to see it.

  3. anyone who studies economics should also be required to pass ethics classes to get their degree

  4. You can't evaluate success unless there's a goal defined first. Economics seems to have been mildly successful at smoothing out business cycles with monetary policy, which is one explicit goal that economics has been applied toward.

    The simplifying assumptions of neoclassical econ models are outrageously unrealistic in most situations, especially the concept of what qualifies as rationality, and the notion of perfect information. Their predictive power seems to be best in particular markets where those assumptions hold well, like in financial markets where all the participants are trained by econ classes to expect and exhibit a certain type of behavior and where trades are public and driven by computers.

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