by mefistofeles » Mon 16 Jul 2007, 06:27:47
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')asically what I'm asking is how would a professional economist model or assigning values to concepts like fairness, of price given that poor people will always pay a higher percentage of their income on stuff like gas and balance that concept against some kinda value assigned to what's fair in life.
Having actually received a degree in economics I can tell you quite abit, although you may have even more questions.
Economicsts ,especially neo classicalists, believe that markets are efficient and that people generally make rational choices. Neo classical economists don't believe in natural limits on growth.
Keysians on the other hand believe that government can through fiscal and monetary policy control economic growth and prosperity and avoid recessions.
Although these two schools are different they share some similarities they believe that supply and demand eventually balance at some equilibrium point.
However these two accepted mainstream schools have failed. They have failed to predict things such as the housing bubble or peak oil. Why? Because they don't address the real world or how people really make decisions.
The assumption behind both schools is that people make decisions rationally. Yet this is totally at odds with what happens in the real world with the real estate flipper who keeps on accumulating more debt or the drug addict. Or with our current peak oil situation/
The assumptions themselves are flawed because they include no adjustments for irrationality or true natural resource limits. This is what Malthus talked about in the 1800's when he said that populations increase geometrically and food production increases arithmetically. Its an idea that an ecologist or biologist is well acquainted with.
Regarding irrationality
behavioural economics is more concerned with addressing that.
At some point ecology,evolution and economics are just dealing with the same thing: how does life thrive prosper. Ultimately no matter how high the GDP numbers if people have no water to drink or food to eat,you probably have an economic problem if certainly not a ecological one.
There are some people doing some very weird work at the edge of evolutionary psychology, evolutionary ecology/biology and economics that want to bring it all together.
Personally whether you are talking about the bacteria in your gut or the stores that open in the mall there are alot of economic/natural systems that operate in conjunction with each other.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')asically what I'm asking is how would a professional economist model or assigning values to concepts like fairness, of price given that poor people will always pay a higher percentage of their income on stuff like gas and balance that concept against some kinda value assigned to what's fair in life.
Economists do not have real answers to those questions. Yes you can develop socio econonomic scales such as
that measure such things.
However I think evolutionary and ecological models may be better.