How
did Paul Krugman get it so Wrong?
John H. Cochrane*
September 16 2009
Many friends and
colleagues have asked me what I think of Paul Krugman’s
New York Times Magazine article, “How did
Economists get it so wrong?”
Most of all, it’s
sad. Imagine this weren’t economics for a moment. Imagine this were a
respected scientist turned popular writer, who says, most basically, that
everything everyone has done in his field since the mid 1960s is a complete
waste of time. Everything that fills its academic journals, is taught in its
PhD programs, presented at its conferences, summarized in its graduate
textbooks, and rewarded with the accolades a profession can bestow, including
multiple Nobel prizes, is totally wrong. Instead, he calls for a return
to the eternal verities of a rather convoluted book written in the 1930s, as
taught to our author in his undergraduate introductory courses. If a
scientist, he might be an AIDS-HIV disbeliever, a creationist, a stalwart that
maybe continents don’t move after all.
It gets worse. Krugman hints at dark conspiracies, claiming
“dissenters are marginalized.” Most of the article is just a
calumnious personal attack on an ever-growing enemies list, which now includes
“new Keynesians” such as Olivier Blanchard and Greg Mankiw.
Rather than source professional writing, he plays gotcha with out-of-context
second-hand quotes from media interviews. He makes stuff up, boldly putting
words in people’s mouths that run contrary to their written
opinions. Even this isn’t enough: he adds cartoons to try to make
his “enemies” look silly, and puts them in false and embarrassing
situations. He accuses us of adopting ideas for pay, selling out for
“sabbaticals at the Hoover institution” and fat “Wall street
paychecks.” It sounds a bit paranoid.
It’s annoying to the
victims, but we’re big boys and girls. It’s a disservice to New
York Times readers. They depend on Krugman to read
real academic literature and digest it, and they get this attack instead. And
it’s ineffective. Any astute reader knows that personal attacks and
innuendo mean the author has run out of ideas.
That’s the biggest
and saddest news of this piece: Paul Krugman has no
interesting ideas whatsoever about what caused our current financial and
economic problems, what policies might have prevented it, or what might help us
in the future, and he has no contact with people who do.
“Irrationality” and advice to spend like a drunken sailor are
pretty superficial compared to all the fascinating things economists are
writing about it these days.
How sad.
That’s what I think,
but I don’t expect you the reader to be convinced by my opinion or my
reference to professional consensus. Maybe he is right. Occasionally
sciences, especially social sciences, do take a wrong turn for a decade or two.
I thought Keynesian economics was such a wrong turn. So let’s take a
quick look at the ideas.
Krugman’s
attack has two goals. First, he thinks financial markets are “inefficient,”
fundamentally due to “irrational” investors, and thus prey to
excessive volatility which needs government control. Second, he likes the huge
“fiscal stimulus” provided by multi-trillion dollar deficits.
Efficiency.
It’s fun to say we
didn’t see the crisis coming, but the central empirical prediction of the
efficient markets hypothesis is precisely that nobody can tell where markets
are going – neither benevolent government bureaucrats, nor crafty
hedge-fund managers, nor ivory-tower academics. This is probably the
best-tested proposition in all the social sciences. Krugman
knows this, so all he can do is huff and puff about his dislike for a theory
whose central prediction is that nobody can be a reliable soothsayer. And of
course it makes no sense whatsoever to try to discredit efficient-markets
finance because its followers didn’t see the crash coming.
Krugman
writes as if the volatility of stock prices alone disproves market efficiency,
and efficient marketers just ignored it all these years. This is a canard that
Paul knows better than to pass on, no matter how rhetorically convenient. (I
can overlook his mixing up the CAPM and Black-Scholes
model, but not this.) There is nothing about “efficiency”
that promises “stability.” “Stable” growth would in
fact be a major violation of efficiency. Efficient markets did not need
to wait for “the memory of 1929 … gradually receding,” nor
did we fail to read the newspapers in 1987. Data from the great
depression has been included in practically all the tests. In fact, the great
“equity premium puzzle” is that if efficient, stock markets
don’t seem risky enough to deter more people from investing! Gene Fama’s PhD thesis was on “fat tails” in
stock returns.
It is true and very well
documented that asset prices move more than reasonable expectations of future cashflows. This might be because people are prey to bursts
of irrational optimism and pessimism. It might also be because people’s
willingness to take on risk varies over time, and is lower in bad economic
times. As Gene Fama pointed out in 1970, these are observationally
equivalent explanations. Unless you are willing to elaborate your theory to the
point that it can quantitatively describe how much and when risk
premiums, or waves of “optimism” and “pessimism,” can
vary, you know nothing. No theory is particularly good at that right now.
Crying
“bubble” is empty unless you have an operational procedure for
identifying bubbles, distinguishing them from rationally low risk premiums, and
not crying wolf too many years in a row. Krugman
rightly praises Robert Shiller for his warnings over many years that house
prices might fall. But advice that we should listen to Shiller, because he got
the last one right, is no more useful than previous advice from many quarters
to listen to Greenspan because he got several ones right. Following the
last mystic oracle until he gets one wrong, then casting him to the wolves, is
not a good long-term strategy for identifying bubbles. Krugman
likes Shiller because he advocates behavioral ideas, but that’s no help
either. People who call themselves behavioral have just as wide a divergence of
opinion as those who don’t. Are markets irrationally exuberant or
irrationally depressed today?
It’s hard to tell.
This difficulty is no
surprise. It’s the central prediction of free-market economics, as
crystallized by Hayek, that no academic, bureaucrat or regulator will ever be
able to fully explain market price movements. Nobody knows what
“fundamental” value is. If anyone could tell what the price of
tomatoes should be, let alone the price of Microsoft stock, communism and
central planning would have worked.
More deeply, the
economist’s job is not to “explain” market fluctuations after
the fact, to give a pleasant story on the evening news about why markets went
up or down. Markets up? “A wave of positive
sentiment.” Markets went down? “Irrational
pessimism.” ( “The risk premium
must have increased” is just as empty.) Our ancestors could do
that. Really, is that an improvement on “Zeus had a fight with
Apollo?” Good serious behavioral economists know this, and they are
circumspect in their explanatory claims.
But this argument takes us
away from the main point. The case for free markets never was that markets are
perfect. The case for free markets is that government control of markets,
especially asset markets, has always been much worse.
Krugman
at bottom is arguing that the government should massively intervene in
financial markets, and take charge of the allocation of capital. He
can’t quite come out and say this, but he does say “Keynes
considered it a very bad idea to let such markets…dictate important
business decisions,” and “finance economists believed that we
should put the capital development of the nation in the hands of what Keynes
had called a `casino.’” Well, if markets can’t be trusted to
allocate capital, we don’t have to connect too many dots to imagine who
Paul has in mind.
To reach this conclusion,
you need evidence, experience, or any realistic hope that the alternative will
be better. Remember, the SEC couldn’t even find Bernie Madoff when he was handed to them on a silver platter.
Think of the great job Fannie, Freddie, and Congress did in the mortgage
market. Is this system going to regulate Citigroup, guide financial
markets to the right price, replace the stock market, and tell our society
which new products are worth investment? As David Wessel’s
excellent In Fed We Trust makes
perfectly clear, government regulators failed just as abysmally as private
investors and economists to see the storm coming. And not
from any lack of smarts.
In fact, the behavioral
view gives us a new and stronger argument against regulation and
control. Regulators are just as human and irrational as market participants.
If bankers are, in Krugman’s words,
“idiots,” then so must be the typical treasury secretary, fed
chairman, and regulatory staff. They act alone or in committees, where
behavioral biases are much better documented than in market settings. They are
still easily captured by industries, and face politically distorted incentives.
Careful
behavioralists know this, and do not quickly
run from “the market got it wrong” to “the government can put
it all right.” Even my most behavioral colleagues Richard Thaler and Cass
Sunstein in their book “Nudge” go only so
far as a light libertarian paternalism, suggesting
good default options on our 401(k) accounts. (And even here they’re not
very clear on how the Federal Nudging Agency is going to steer clear of
industry capture.) They don’t even think of jumping from irrational
markets, which they believe in deeply, to Federal control of stock and house
prices and allocation of capital.
Stimulus
Most
of all, Krugman likes fiscal stimulus.
In this quest, he accuses us and the rest of the economics profession of
“mistaking beauty for truth.” He’s not clear on what the
“beauty” is that we all fell in love with, and why one should shun
it, for good reason. The first siren of beauty is simple logical
consistency. Paul’s Keynesian economics requires that people make
logically inconsistent plans to consume more, invest more, and pay more taxes
with the same income. The second siren is plausible assumptions about how
people behave. Keynesian economics requires that the government is able to
systematically fool people again and again. It presumes that people
don’t think about the future in making decisions today. Logical
consistency and plausible foundations are indeed “beautiful” but to
me they are also basic preconditions for “truth.”
In economics, stimulus
spending ran aground on Robert Barro’s Ricardian equivalence theorem. This theorem says that
debt-financed spending can’t have any more effect than spending financed
by raising taxes. People, seeing the higher future taxes that must pay off the
debt, will simply save more. They will buy the new government debt and leave
all spending decisions unaltered. Is this theorem true? It’s a logical
connection from a set of “if” to a set of “therefores.” Not even Paul can object to the
connection.
Therefore, we have to
examine the “ifs.” And those ifs are, as usual, obviously not true.
For example, the theorem presumes lump-sum taxes, not proportional income
taxes. Alas, when you take this into account we are all made poorer by deficit
spending, so the multiplier is most likely negative. The theorem (like most
Keynesian economics) ignores the composition of output; but surely spending
money on roads rather than cars can affect the overall level.
Economists have spent a
generation tossing and turning the Ricardian
equivalence theorem, and assessing the likely effects of fiscal stimulus in its
light, generalizing the “ifs” and figuring out the likely “therefores.” This is exactly the right way to
do things. The impact of Ricardian equivalence
is not that this simple abstract benchmark is literally true. The impact is
that in its wake, if you want to understand the effects of government spending,
you have to specify why it is false. Doing so does not lead you anywhere
near old-fashioned Keynesian economics. It leads you to consider distorting
taxes, how much people care about their children, how many people would like to
borrow more to finance today’s consumption and so on. And when you find
“market failures” that might justify a multiplier, optimal-policy
analysis suggests fixing the market failures, not their exploitation by fiscal multiplier. Most “New Keynesian”
analyses that add frictions don’t produce big multipliers.
This is how real thinking
about stimulus actually proceeds. Nobody ever “asserted that an
increase in government spending cannot, under any circumstances, increase
employment.” This is unsupportable by any serious review of professional
writings, and Krugman knows it. (My own are perfectly
clear on lots of possibilities for an answer that is not zero.) But thinking
through this sort of thing and explaining it is much harder than just tarring
your enemies with out-of-context quotes, ethical innuendo, or silly cartoons.
In fact, I propose that Krugman himself doesn’t really believe the Keynesian
logic for that stimulus. I doubt he would follow that logic to its inevitable
conclusions. Stimulus must have some other attraction to him.
If you believe the
Keynesian argument for stimulus, you should think Bernie Madoff
is a hero. He took money from people who were saving it, and gave it to people
who most assuredly were going to spend it. Each dollar so transferred, in
Krugman’s world, generates an additional dollar
and a half of national income. The analogy is even closer. Madoff didn’t just take money from his savers, he essentially borrowed it from them, giving them
phony accounts with promises of great profits to come. This looks a lot like
government debt.
If you believe the
Keynesian argument for stimulus, you don’t care how the money is spent.
All this puffery about “infrastructure,” monitoring, wise
investment, jobs “created” and so on is pointless. Keynes thought
the government should pay people to dig ditches and fill them up.
If you believe in Keynesian
stimulus, you don’t even care if the government spending money is stolen.
Actually, that would be better. Thieves have notoriously high propensities to
consume.
The
crash.
Krugman’s
article is supposedly about how the crash and recession changed our thinking,
and what economics has to say about it. The most amazing news in the whole
article is that Paul Krugman has absolutely no idea
about what caused the crash, what policies might have prevented it, and what
policies we should adopt going forward. He seems completely unaware of the
large body of work by economists who actually do know something about the
banking and financial system, and have been thinking about it productively for
a generation.
Here’s all he has to
say: “Irrationality” caused markets to go up and then down.
“Spending” then declined, for unclear reasons, possibly
“irrational” as well. The sum total of his policy recommendations
is for the Federal Government to spend like a drunken sailor after the fact.
Paul, there was a financial
crisis, a classic near-run on banks. The centerpiece of our crash was not the
relatively free stock or real estate markets, it was
the highly regulated commercial banks. A generation of economists has thought
really hard about these kinds of events. Look up Diamond, Rajan, Gorton,
Kashyap, Stein, and so on. They’ve thought about why there is so
much short term debt, why banks run, how deposit insurance and credit
guarantees help, and how they give incentives for excessive risk taking.
If we want to think about
events and policies, this seems like more than a minor detail. The hard and
central policy debate over the last year was how to manage this financial
crisis. Now it is how to set up the incentives of banks and other financial
institutions so this mess doesn’t happen again. There’s lots of
good and subtle economics here that New York Times readers might like to know
about. What does Krugman have to say? Zero.
Krugman
doesn’t even have anything to say about the Fed. Ben Bernanke did a
lot more last year than set the funds rate to zero and then go off on vacation
and wait for fiscal policy to do its magic. Leaving aside the string of
bailouts, the Fed started term lending to securities dealers. Then, rather than
buy treasuries in exchange for reserves, it essentially sold treasuries in
exchange for private debt. Though the funds rate was near zero, the Fed noticed
huge commercial paper and securitized debt spreads, and intervened in those
markets. There is no “the” interest rate anymore,
the Fed is attempting to manage them all. Recently the Fed has started buying
massive quantities of mortgage-backed securities and long-term treasury debt.
Monetary policy now has
little to do with “money” vs. “bonds” with all the
latter lumped together. Monetary policy has become wide-ranging financial
policy. Does any of this work? What are the dangers? Can the Fed stay
independent in this new role? These are the questions of our time. What does Krugman have to say? Nothing.
Krugman
is trying to say that a cabal of obvious crackpots bedazzled all of
macroeconomics with the beauty of their mathematics, to the point of inducing
policy paralysis. Alas, that won’t stick. The sad fact is that few
in Washington pay the slightest attention to modern macroeconomic research, in
particular anything with a serious intertemporal
dimension. Paul’s simple Keynesianism has dominated policy analysis
for decades and continues to do so. From the CEA to the Fed to the OMB and CBO,
everyone just adds up consumer, investment and government “demand”
to forecast output and uses simple Phillips curves to think about
inflation. If a failure of ideas caused bad policy, it’s a
simpleminded Keynesianism that failed.
The
future of economics.
How should economics
change? Krugman argues for three incompatible
changes.
First, he argues for a
future of economics that “recognizes flaws and frictions,” and
incorporates alternative assumptions about behavior, especially towards
risk-taking. To which I say, “Hello, Paul, where have you been for
the last 30 years?” Macroeconomists have not spent 30 years admiring the
eternal verities of Kydland and Prescott’s 1982
paper. Pretty much all we have been doing for 30 years is introducing flaws,
frictions and new behaviors, especially new models of attitudes to risk,
and comparing the resulting models, quantitatively, to data. The long
literature on financial crises and banking which Krugman
does not mention has also been doing exactly the same.
Second, Krugman argues that “a more or less Keynesian view is
the only plausible game in town,” and “Keynesian economics remains
the best framework we have for making sense of recessions and
depressions.” One thing is pretty clear by now, that when economics
incorporates flaws and frictions, the result will not be to rehabilitate an
80-year-old book. As Paul bemoans, the “new Keynesians” who did
just what he asks, putting Keynes inspired price-stickiness into logically
coherent models, ended up with something that looked a lot more like
monetarism. (Actually, though this is the consensus, my own work finds that
new-Keynesian economics ended up with something much different and more radical
than monetarism.) A science that moves forward almost never ends up back where
it started. Einstein revises Newton, but does not send you back to
Aristotle. At best you can play the fun game of hunting for inspirational
quotes, but that doesn’t mean that you could have known the same thing by
just reading Keynes once more.
Third, and most
surprising, is Krugman’s Luddite attack on
mathematics; “economists as a group, mistook beauty, clad in
impressive-looking mathematics, for truth.” Models are “gussied up
with fancy equations.” I’m old enough to remember when Krugman was young, working out the interactions of game
theory and increasing returns in international trade for which he won the Nobel
Prize, and the old guard tut-tutted “nice
recreational mathematics, but not real-world at all.” He once wrote eloquently about how only math
keeps your ideas straight in economics. How quickly time passes.
Again, what is the
alternative? Does Krugman really think we can make
progress on his – and my – agenda for economic and financial
research -- understanding frictions, imperfect markets, complex human behavior,
institutional rigidities – by reverting to a literary style of
exposition, and abandoning the attempt to compare theories quantitatively
against data? Against the worldwide tide of quantification in all fields of
human endeavor (read “Moneyball”) is
there any real hope that this will work in economics?
No, the problem is that we
don’t have enough math. Math in economics
serves to keep the logic straight, to make sure that the “then”
really does follow the “if,” which it so frequently does not if you
just write prose. The challenge is how hard it is to write down explicit
artificial economies with these ingredients, actually solve them, in order to
see what makes them tick. Frictions are just bloody hard with the mathematical
tools we have now.
The
insults.
The level of personal
attack in this article, and fudging of the facts to achieve it, is simply
amazing.
As one little example (ok,
I’m a bit sensitive), take my quotation about carpenters in Nevada. I
didn’t write this. It’s a quote, taken out of context, from a
bloomberg.com article, written by a reporter who I spent about 10 hours with
patiently trying to explain some basics, and who also turned out only to be on
a hunt for embarrassing quotes. (It’s the last time I’ll do
that!) I was trying to explain how sectoral
shifts contribute to unemployment. Krugman follows it
by a lie -- I never asserted that “it take mass unemployment across the
whole nation to get carpenters to move out of Nevada.” You can’t
even dredge up a quote for that monstrosity.
What’s the
point? I don’t think Paul disagrees that sectoral
shifts result in some unemployment, so the quote actually makes sense as
economics. The only point is to make me, personally, seem heartless -- a pure, personal, calumnious attack, having nothing to
do with economics.
Bob Lucas has written
extensively on Keynesian and monetarist economics, sensibly and
even-handedly. Krugman chooses to quote a joke,
made back in 1980 at a lunch talk to some business school alumni. Really, this
is on the level of the picture of Barack Obama with Bill Ayers that Sean Hannity likes to show on Fox News.
It goes on. Krugman asserts that I and others “believe”
“that an increase in government spending cannot, under any circumstances,
increase employment,” or that we “argued that price fluctuations
and shocks to demand actually had nothing to do with the business
cycle.” These are just gross distortions, unsupported by any
documentation, let alone professional writing. And Krugman
knows better. All economic models are simplified to exhibit one point; we all
understand the real world is more complicated; and his job is supposed to be to
explain that to lay readers. It would be no different than if someone were to
look up Paul’s early work which assumed away transport costs and claim
“Paul Krugman believes ocean shipping is free,
how stupid” in the Wall Street Journal.
The idea that any of us do
what we do because we’re paid off by fancy Wall Street salaries or cushy
sabbaticals at Hoover is just ridiculous. (If Krugman
knew anything about hedge funds he’d know that believing in efficient
markets disqualifies you for employment. Nobody wants a guy who thinks
you can’t make any money trading!) Given Krugman’s
speaking fees, it’s a surprising first stone for him to cast.
Apparently, salacious
prose, innuendo, calumny, and selective quotation from media aren’t
enough: Krugman added cartoons to try to make
opponents look silly. The Lucas-Blanchard-Bernanke conspiratorial cocktail party
celebrating the end of recessions is a silly fiction. So is their despondent
gloom on reading “recession” in the paper. Nobody at a conference
looks like Dr. Pangloss with wild hair and a suit
from the 1800s. (OK, Randy Wright has the hair, but not the suit.) Keynes
did not reappear at the NBER to be booed as an “outsider.”
Why are you allowed to make things up in pictures that wouldn’t pass even
the Times’ weak fact-checking in words?
Most of all, Krugman isn’t doing his job. He’s
supposed to read, explain, and criticize things economists write, and real
professional writing, not interviews, opeds and blog
posts. At a minimum, this style leads to the unavoidable conclusion that Krugman isn’t reading real economics anymore.
How did Krugman get it so wrong?
So what is Krugman up to? Why become a denier, a skeptic, an apologist
for 70 year old ideas, replete with well-known logical fallacies, a pariah? Why
publish an essentially personal attack on an ever-growing enemies list that now
includes practically every professional economist? Why publish an incoherent
vision for the future of economics?
The only explanation that
makes sense to me is that Krugman isn’t trying
to be an economist, he is trying to be a partisan,
political opinion writer. This is not an insult. I read George Will, Charles Krauthnammer and Frank Rich with equal pleasure even when I
disagree with them. Krugman wants to be Rush
Limbaugh of the Left.
Alas, to Krugman, as to far too many ex-economists in partisan
debates, economics is not a quest for understanding. It is a set of
debating points to argue for policies that one has adopted for partisan
political purposes. “Stimulus” is just marketing to sell
Congressmen and voters on a package of government spending priorities that you
want for political reasons. It’s not a proposition to be explained,
understood, taken seriously to its logical limits, or reflective of market
failures that should be addressed directly.
Why argue for a
nonsensical future for economics? Well, again, if you don’t regard
economics as a science, a discipline that ought to result in quantitative
matches to data, a discipline that requires crystal-clear logical connections
between the “if” and the “then,” if the point of
economics is merely to provide marketing and propaganda for
politically-motivated policy, then his writing does make sense. It makes sense
to appeal to some future economics – not yet worked out, even verbally
– to disdain quantification and comparison to data, and to appeal to the
authority of ancient books as interpreted by you, their lone remaining apostle.
Most of all, this is the
only reason I can come up with to understand why Krugman
wants to write personal attacks on those who disagree with him. I like it
when people disagree with me, and take time to read my work and criticize it.
At worst I learn how to position it better. At best, I discover I was wrong and
learn something. I send a polite thank you note.
Krugman
wants people to swallow his arguments whole from his authority, without
demanding logic, or evidence. Those who disagree with him, alas, are
pretty smart and have pretty good arguments if you bother to read them. So, he
tries to discredit them with personal attacks.
This is the political
sphere, not the intellectual one. Don’t argue with them, swift-boat them.
Find some embarrassing quote from an old interview. Well, good luck, Paul.
Let’s just not pretend this has anything to do with economics, or actual
truth about how the world works or could be made a better place.
*University of Chicago
Booth School of Business. Many colleagues and friends helped, but I don’t
want to name them for obvious reasons. Krugman fans:
Please don’t bother emailing me to tell me what a jerk I am. I will
update this occasionally, so please pass on the link rather than the
document,
http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/john.cochrane/research/Papers/#news.