1st Edition

Economics Through the Looking-Glass Reflections on a Perverted Science

By R.A. Rayman Copyright 1998
    352 Pages
    by Routledge

    352 Pages
    by Routledge

    Published in 1998. In spite of spectacular improvements in market flexibility, the characteristics of the past twenty years are slow growth and high unemployment. Economics Through the Looking-Glass exposes the theoretical fallacy at the heart of the New Economic Orthodoxy. The fallacy lies in treating the economy as a "single-gear" machine guaranteed to operate at its full employment potential as long as it benefits from the lubricant of perfectly flexible markets (in a Walrasian Utopia of continuous market-clearing equilibrium). Unemployment is thereby reduced to a structural problem of market imperfection. As a cure for unemployment, market flexibility is presumed to be adequate; as a cure for inflation, monetary restriction is presumed to be safe. The flaw in Orthodox logic is exposed by a demonstration that a monetary economy operates as a 'multi-gear' machine. Unless it is in 'top-gear', market flexibility (even of Utopian perfection) is not sufficient for full employment. 'Single-gear' Economic Orthodoxy is shown to have developed, not as a science, but as a religion beginning with Adam Smith's revelation of the Law of Competition. A Looking-Glass journey backwards in time from Adam Smith uncovers his suppression of the Law of Circulation and exposes the dangerous delusion of Orthodox economic policy. As a weapon against unemployment, market flexibility is inadequate; as a weapon against inflation, monetary restriction is unsafe. The 'multi-gear' alternative heralds the final stage of economic liberalisation: deregulation of the market for money. The rescue of interest rates from political or central bank interference and the control of inflation by a mechanism triggered by market forces would put an end to the Orthodox policy of maintaining unemployment above its natural market rate by misguided monetary intervention.

    Part 1: The Dismal Science  1. The End of Economic Civilization as We Know It  2. The Breakdown of Law and Order  3. It Came from Outer Space  4. The Dismal Science  Part 2: Religion and the Rise of Monetarism  5. The Revelation  6. The Classical Doctrine  7. The Immaculate Conception  8. The Golden Age of Classical Orthodoxy  9. The Keynesian Reformation  10. The Neo-Classical Counter-Reformation  11. Monetarism in Excelsis  12. The New Orthodoxy  13. The Single-Gear Economy  14. Reality and the Fall of Monetarism  Part 3: A Young Person's Guide to Economic Theory  15. Tweedledum and Tweedledee  16. The Invisible Hand  17. Money Makes the World go Round  18. Saving: The Noblest Virtue  19. Saving: The Deadliest Sin  20. Money is the Root of All Evil  21. The Multi-Gear Economy  Part 4: What’s Wrong with Economic Theory  22. What’s Wrong with Classical Economics?  23. What’s Wrong with Keynes’s General Theory?  24. What’s Wrong with Monetarism?  25. What's Wrong with the New Orthodoxy?  Part 5: Economics Through The Looking Glass  26. What's Wrong with Religion?  27. The New Inquisition  28. The Revolution that Never Was  29. The Immaculate Misconception  30. The Myth of Say's Law  31. The Revelation that Never Was  32. The Lost Commandment: The Law of Circulation  Part 6: Back to the Future  33. David Hume (1711-1776)  34. Anne Robert Jacques Turgot (1727-1781)  35. Francois Quesnat (1694-1774)  36. Richard Cantillon (1680?-1734)  37. Bernard Mandeville (1670-1733)  38. John Law (1671-1729)  39. John Locke (1632-1704)  40. Sir William Petty (1623-1687)  41. The Merchantilists.

    Biography

    R.A. Rayman

    ’...masterful and convincing...compulsory reading for all younger economists, most of whom have never had the benefit of studying the history of their discipline or a basis for questioning economic orthodoxy...a challenging and in many ways important book.’ The Business Economist