Dont try to finish this argument with a false dichotomy. You can grow without solid institutions. You will never grow as efficiently or completely to other countries but you will grow. On the other hand you can have the best institutions in the world, but with no capital investment you have nothing. You dont seem to understand this point.Correct, & I have never said otherwise. But as Ragnar Nurkse wrote, 'capital is a necessary but not a sufficient condition of progress'. The latter is the part you seem to have trouble with.
You've mentioned times when investments have failed. Not even close to a valid point. Obviously when companies or projects that people have invested in fail you lose what you started with.Not so. Forget models for a while & study real world examples. You will find that there are cases where investment (e.g. a large part of the old Soviet food-processing industry) can destroy value. The raw materials were worth more than the output. If that investment had not been made, & the raw materials had been sold unprocessed, the economy would have been larger. The world is full of cases of investment which has failed to produce growth, in which the goods & effort invested have produced as much growth as a man digging a trench while someone else fills it in behind him. Foreign aid is responsible for some of the most egregious examples, e.g. the infamous groundnut scheme, or the massive CIDA-funded bakery in Dar-es-Salaam. Occasionally, a whole (usually centrally-planned) economy functions on that level for a while.
Obviously. If your an idiot then it wont matter. The assumption is people are competent. Incompetent people will make investments useless but it doesn't make investments in general useless without institutions and the proper endogenous variables.If you invest productively you will grow. For investment to be productive requires the right conditions, & the right decisions. Wrong institutions, wrong incentives, & wrong decisions will be made, as in the above examples.
Before you go on lecturing me thinking your right you need to be actually right. You dont have an argument, and dont try to take the cowards way out when your wrong.When young, & still studying, there is a tendency, easy to fall prey to, to be very enthusiastic about what one has most recently learned. One can become carried away with it. It seems to explain everything, to be . . right. Twenty five years later, having watched things one learned as the latest, cutting-edge ideas having been modified, perhaps completely replaced, & having tested them against the real world & found that they need a bit of bashing & bodging into something less elegant to make them work, one tends to be rather less easily enthused with theories, & tend more towards pragmatic solutions.
On the contrary. I have said - twice - and this is the third time. Capital investment is necessary to growth.. Where we disagree is that you maintain that it is the only thing that is necessary. Did you once work for Goskomplan?Dont try to finish this argument with a false dichotomy. You can grow without solid institutions. You will never grow as efficiently or completely to other countries but you will grow. On the other hand you can have the best institutions in the world, but with no capital investment you have nothing. You dont seem to understand this point. .
There are cases where misdirected capital investment has a negative impact on the economy which is much greater than merely the loss of the invested capital. I deliberately selected a few examples, all of which are cited in standard texts (the groundnut scheme has been used as an example for 50 years, & used to be in school economics textbooks) to illustrate the phenomenon.You've mentioned times when investments have failed. Not even close to a valid point. Obviously when companies or projects that people have invested in fail you lose what you started with. .
Exactly! Theoretical models have built-in assumptions. Often, the assumptions are faulty. Among demonstrably faulty assumptions are 1) perfect information (which is why there are models which try to not to assume it) & 2) economic rationality. Note the word "economic" in there. It's a pretty standard assumption in economic models, but in the real world, rational behaviour does not always (actually, it frequently doesn't) conform to an economists definition of rationality. Human behaviour is affected by too many variables for economists to model them.Obviously. If your an idiot then it wont matter. The assumption is people are competent. .....
Sure there can be such a thing as a new military power. The United States emerged from the shadow of the UK and arguably the French to become a world power. There's no reason why military powers can't rise and fall. Although this process will take a very long time and we may not see it happen in our lifetime.Moving on from the debate about the NATURE of economics...
Is there such a thing as 'new' major military powers?
You do realise that if you follow this line of reasoning too far we'll have to kill you? Can't have everyone knowing.rational determinism.... the one thing the unites The Harvard school of business, Marxist economic theory and the jesuits!
what was he even talking about? incredibly confusing! :nutkick - he does need to be careful now though!You do realise that if you follow this line of reasoning too far we'll have to kill you? Can't have everyone knowing.
Hold on. I never said institutions were not necessary. I pointed out the key difference between South and North, being the institutions.On the contrary. I have said - twice - and this is the third time. Capital investment is necessary to growth.. Where we disagree is that you maintain that it is the only thing that is necessary. Did you once work for Goskomplan?
Your point doesn't disprove or reduce the importance of capital. It shows that there are times when investments fail, and they will regardless of institutions. If your point is that human capital is as important, yes it is. But if you were at all familiar with the endogenous growth model you'd know that it states that as long as savings rate + tech and human capital growth rate is larger than the deprecation rate then countries will grow forever. This in itself is ludicrous and probably the biggest reason why endogenous models are not accepted anywhere.There are cases where misdirected capital investment has a negative impact on the economy which is much greater than merely the loss of the invested capital. I deliberately selected a few examples, all of which are cited in standard texts (the groundnut scheme has been used as an example for 50 years, & used to be in school economics textbooks) to illustrate the phenomenon.
There are models that introduce asymmetric information. You need to assume rationality because you cannot model a bunch of idiots who buy stuff at random. Econometrics touches into this but I didn't go that route.Exactly! Theoretical models have built-in assumptions. Often, the assumptions are faulty. Among demonstrably faulty assumptions are 1) perfect information (which is why there are models which try to not to assume it) & 2) economic rationality. Note the word "economic" in there. It's a pretty standard assumption in economic models, but in the real world, rational behaviour does not always (actually, it frequently doesn't) conform to an economists definition of rationality. Human behaviour is affected by too many variables for economists to model them.
I've never said that. Someone who Admin: Text deleted up an investment doesn't prove anything other than the fact that people can Admin: Text deleted up. There are alot of endogenous models that try to factor this in but you are factoring in a variable with no significant relation to the dependent variable. A growth model is a growth model it doesn't factor when an economy doesn't grow.You are, as you have just made explicit, assuming that when a theoretical model assumes economic rationality, & real life fails to match it, the fault is not in the model but in reality.
BTW, the people responsible for the economically damaging investments I mentioned were highly qualified, expert, academic economists. More doctorates between them than you could shake a stick at.
No, you said the difference was investment. Look at the post where I referred to the parlous economic state of Africa.Hold on. I never said institutions were not necessary. I pointed out the key difference between South and North, being the institutions
Of course it doesn't. It isn't meant to. For the fourth time, capital is essential. Please stop misrepresenting my point of view.Your point doesn't disprove or reduce the importance of capital.
Competence & rationality are reasonable assumptions most of the time, true, but rational behaviour is not necessarily economically rational. Human beings have many other motivations. And most of the time does not mean all the time.Stuff like competent and rational behavior are not out of place assumptions. They may not be true all the time but they are true most of the time and the assumptions hold a majority of the time.
Precisely. It is an explanation of why economies grow, when they do. It is not a prediction that economies will grow. That requires the right policies & institutions, as well as well-directed investment.A growth model is a growth model it doesn't factor when an economy doesn't grow.
Well that article is kinda unfair. They enjoy a global reach due to MODERN technology. Of course no prior superpower(besides the British Empire) has had such extensive reach.The current US military dominance, and the general hegemony that the United States enjoys as the only superpower, is unprecedented in world history. There are several reasons for this. First, there has never before been a single superpower with such wide global interests and rapid and sustained global reach. Second, there has never been a power with global reach with a conventional capability that so exceeds its opponents as to make a conventional contest highly one-sided. Third, the United States is in the position where it has already achieved this domination without exhaustion and need only defend its position to remain pre-eminent. The onus is on others to catch, to match and to surpass. Fourth, the United States is the key driver, and major underwriter, of many of the world institutions that manage global affairs, and is uniquely placed to exert influence. Unlike nuclear weapons, however, the US dominance can be undone—world history has shown that hegemonic status is not permanent. The only difficulty with this argument is that it is arguing by example rather than the particular circumstances in which the United States finds itself. Just as the current situation of the United States within the world is unique, so might be its staying power.
Unfortunately this is going to come back to economics, military power is built on economic might, as long as the US maintains its economic lead the lightly hood is its continued hegemony.The current US military dominance, and the general hegemony that the United States enjoys as the only superpower, is unprecedented in world history. There are several reasons for this. First, there has never before been a single superpower with such wide global interests and rapid and sustained global reach. Second, there has never been a power with global reach with a conventional capability that so exceeds its opponents as to make a conventional contest highly one-sided. Third, the United States is in the position where it has already achieved this domination without exhaustion and need only defend its position to remain pre-eminent. The onus is on others to catch, to match and to surpass. Fourth, the United States is the
key driver, and major underwriter, of many of the world institutions that manage global affairs, and is uniquely placed to exert influence. Unlike nuclear weapons, however, the US dominance can be undone—world history has shown that hegemonic status is not permanent.29 The only difficulty with
this argument is that it is arguing by example rather than the particular circumstances in which the United States finds itself. Just as the current situation of the United States within the world is unique, so might be its staying power.