Showing posts with label Deirdre McCloskey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deirdre McCloskey. Show all posts

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Video: Gary North on the World's Transition to the Modern Economy

Via BBC's Hans Rosling, I have previously posted a video showing the modern economy's dramatic growth transformation which begun during the 18th century, from the agricultural age to the industrial era to today's post industrial information/digital epoch.

In the following video, Austrian economist Gary North expounds on Deidre McCloskey's theme that "ideas" or "rhetoric" or the "Bourgeois Dignity or Virtue" as the major force behind such monumental progress. 

As per Mr. North, Ms. McCloskey's theme signifies as
a change of attitude regarding entrepreneurship, and a change in attitude regarding innovation and personal wealth derived from innovation and entrepreneurship...

The argument is people’s attitude for the first time radically changed on the question of the legitimacy of personal wealth through entrepreneurial activities 
Mr. North adds two additional factors to the ideas or virtues of the pursuit of self-interests: one is ethics (view of right and wrong), which may have played a significant shift in the public's opinion, where acquisition of personal wealth became legitimate. Second is a shift of the view of the future (based on religious influences or what Mr. North calls as the "post millennialist eschatology"). 

In short, people's values and beliefs evolved overtime to reflect on the marginal changes on the course of actions undertaken which compounded to manifest on such progress.

Friday, February 01, 2013

Quote of the Day: The Combination of Bad Economics and Bad History is Pernicious.

Few intellectual activities are more mischievous when done poorly than economics or history.  The power of fallacious economic reasoning or fallacious historical example to damage society is obvious: the pseudo-economics of mercantilism has been reducing trade and protecting vested interests for many centuries; the pseudo-history of the Aryan “race” lent dignity to German fascism.  The combination of bad economics and bad history in bad economic history is pernicious.
The above quote is from page 453 of Deirdre McCloskey’s June 1976 article in the Journal of Economic Literature, “Does the Past Have Useful Economics? sourced from Café Hayek’s Professor Don Boudreaux

The above quote reflects on much of how the mainstream thinks and what they practice today, e.g. inflationism.  

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

We are Living in the Best Years in over Two Thousand Years

The Economist has this interesting population weighted chart which shows that much of human history and progress has been happening during the 20th century up to the present.

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The Economist writes, (bold emphasis mine)

Since there are almost 7 billion people alive today, it follows that they are making seven times as much history as the 1 billion alive in 1811. The chart below shows a population-weighted history of the past two millennia. By this reckoning, over 28% of all the history made since the birth of Christ was made in the 20th century. Measured in years lived, the present century, which is only ten years old, is already "longer" than the whole of the 17th century. This century has made an even bigger contribution to economic history. Over 23% of all the goods and services made since 1AD were produced from 2001 to 2010, according to an updated version of Angus Maddison's figures.

The chart reveals how growth in population has coincided with economic output expansion.

And second and most importantly, that human progress from the last century through the current millennium has been exponential.

Perhaps Professor Deirdre McCloskey’s “Bourgeois Revaluation” accounts for as the pivotal factor for such astounding acceleration in the rate of progress.

As Professor Don Boudreaux writes of Professor McCloskey’s thesis, (bold emphasis mine)

Only when merchants, tinkerers and practical seekers of profit in markets came to be respected -- and to be widely spoken of with respect, even with admiration -- did the social status of the bourgeoisie increase enough to make membership in that group desirable to large numbers of people. And when this Bourgeois Revaluation happened, innovation skyrocketed.

It's this innovation -- mad, fevered, historically off-the-charts amounts of innovation -- that really is what we today call "capitalism."

I am glad to have lived in this generation and to be a part of and witness such magnificent phenomenon unfold before our eyes.

And I guess that despite all the risks and the prospective afflictions which could interrupt or disrupt on such trends, the best is yet to come. I think that we are transitioning towards the information age that should characterize even faster rate of innovations under more decentralized settings (governance included).

Remember, such feat came in spite of the 2 World Wars and the gruesome tragedies of the failed experiment of communism in the 20th century.

The above should serve as good tidings for our progenies.