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Home » What Economics Gets Wrong About Humanity: Adnan Muminovic (Transcript)

What Economics Gets Wrong About Humanity: Adnan Muminovic (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of Adnan Muminovic’s talk titled “What Economics Gets Wrong About Humanity” at TEDxSarajevo 2024 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

The Unique Status of Economics

I don’t know if you ever realized this, but economics is the only social science for which a Nobel Prize is awarded. True, it’s kind of a fake one because Alfred Nobel did not include it in his official will, but these are all technicalities. In the end, it doesn’t really matter because no other social science has even awarded a fake Nobel, which I believe has given economics a special wheel of authority and power.

And what I really mean by that is that when economics gets things wrong, or at least it gets them insufficiently right, this has wide-ranging consequences for society. So today, I wish to talk about one of these shortcomings, the one I believe to be the most serious one.

Of course, before I go ahead, it’s worth mentioning that there’s not one way of economic thinking, right? I mean, today we have many non-mainstream brands of economics. I think you can even make the case that there’s an increasing amount of them. However, there’s still a widely accepted view that dominates our textbooks and the way we teach our students.

Problematic Views in Mainstream Economics

Some of these views are truly problematic. They range from our obsession with GDP as a measure of all things to the endlessly repeated claims that we are fully selfish, fully rational, and that we have unlimited wants, none of which is really true. Just a few years ago, two scientists seriously questioned this idea of whether we have unlimited wants. But this is not why I’m here today, because my problem is much bigger and refers to the obsession of traditional or mainstream economics with measuring things, which in most cases translates into an obsession with prices.

The Price-Value Dilemma

More than 100 years ago, Oscar Wilde observed that “people nowadays know the price of everything and the value of nothing,” and that’s the difference between price and value that I wish to discuss today. Because if you think about it, today we largely live in a world where we have one dominant mode of measuring things, namely the price. And at least to some extent, this is understandable, right? Because if you think about it, we live in a world largely dominated by market economies, and a market economy is a decentralized system which is regulated, controlled, and directed by prices.

Prices tell us a hell of a lot. They tell us what people want, where they want it, how desperately they want it, how available it is, which in turn signals to producers what and where to produce and where to sell it. It’s part of a truly magnificent system that almost works like a charm, so it’s natural that we’re in love with it.

The Mathematization of Economics

However, another related reason why we’re so obsessed with prices comes from a general obsession in economics with measuring things, which is really all part of an, I think, unfortunate trend that started a few decades ago called the mathematization of economics. Now we desperately want to quantify everything, to express it in numbers, which is all meant to make economics more scientific and more rigorous. Don’t get me wrong, I have nothing against that.

But in a world where everyone has an opinion about everything, it’s natural that we crave hard facts, that we crave numbers, until you realize that this has now led to a truly absurd situation where we have started to treat some of the most important things in our lives as worthless simply because they do not have a price or any other way of capturing them. And if you think about it, I mean, just think about stuff like love, compassion, freedom, dignity. Do they have a way of being quantified? Of course they don’t, which doesn’t mean that they’re not important, yet this is precisely how they’re being treated.

The Absurdity of Quantifying Everything

So I wanted to give you an illustration before I go on, just to demonstrate to you how far this obsession is going. In 2008, a paper came out titled “Putting a Price Tag on Friends, Relatives, and Neighbors,” and I think the title alone should make you laugh. I think the title alone is truly fascinating. There is widespread scientific agreement that our social ties, our friendships, and all other relationships make us happy, and you won’t be surprised to hear that. But now we’ve come to a situation where this is not enough anymore.

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We want to know just how much, in monetary terms, our social relationships are good for us. And behind me, you see the results. The author calculates something in the range of 85,000 British pounds per year, which is, I mean, ridiculous. And you might laugh at this, but it’s actually becoming extremely, extremely serious and consequential.

The Nature Dilemma

However, nowhere, truly nowhere, is this failure to distinguish between price and value so bad and so devastating as with our relationship with nature. And this is basically what I’m getting at today. Now imagine a green park, a green area, a patch of a forest, anywhere in the world, and the debate whether to turn this green park into a residential commercial building. How is this debate conducted?

On one side, you have people supporting the project that will tell you, “Oh, it will generate so much economic activity,” you know, because there will be construction workers that will be working there and who will be paid. Small businesses will sell ties, others will sell windows, businesses will sell concrete, there will be utility companies selling water and electricity, and it will be so good. And the thing is, these people will be capable, almost to the dollar, to calculate just how economically beneficial the project will be.

Now think about the other side.