Economic failures
I read
recently a critique of the economics field, by Timothy Garton Ash, based on the supposed failure of the field to achieve the basic principles of
science. The author stresses the need, in economics, of more humble and modest
assertions giving the uncertainty of the field.
I went to Wikipedia to find the definition of science and it
says “Science is a systematic enterprise that creates, builds and organizes
knowledge in the form of testable
explanations and predictions about the universe.”
And goes on saying:
“Popper proposed replacing verifiability with falsifiability
as the landmark of scientific theories, and replacing induction with
falsification as the empirical method. Popper further claimed that there is
actually only one universal method, not specific to science: the negative method
of criticism, trial and error. It covers all products of the human mind,
including science, mathematics, philosophy, and art. […] A scientific theory is
empirical, and is always open to falsification if new evidence is presented.
That is, no theory is ever considered strictly certain as science accepts the
concept of fallibilism.”
This is probably one of the main deficiencies of the
economic science, the lack of replicability. Not that it can’t be done, but that
there is no incentive whatsoever to the economic researcher for doing so. That
causes a big black hole, without new evidence there is no falsification.
So, when Andrew C. Chang and
Phillip Li decided to start digging on replicability and falsifiability in
economics, this is what happened:
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