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The Corruption of Economics

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Georgist critique of Neo-Classical economics
Part ofa series on
Georgism

The Corruption of Economics is a 1994 book byMason Gaffney andFred Harrison, containing a critique ofneoclassical economics and an account of the alleged suppression of the economic ideas ofHenry George.

Content

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The book consists of four essays.[1] Harrison contributed two essays,Prologue: Who's Afraid of Henry George? andThe Georgist Paradigm, and one co-written with Kris Feder,Postscript on neo-classical economics: South Africa 1994: Countdown to Disaster.[1][2]

In the introduction toA Philosophy for a Fair Society (1994) byMichael Hudson, G. J. Miller and Kris Feder, Harrison gave a summary:

TheGeorgist paradigm infuriated the aristocratic landlords. They strenuously schemed to suppress public understanding of its virtues. They initiated political action against the policy. In the United States, they even funded universities and professorships to degrade Henry George's thesis.[3]

James K. Galbraith, reviewing the second edition (2006), described the argument:

InThe Corruption of Economics, Gaffney and fellow Georgist Fred Harrison begin their inquiry with the observation that America’s nineteenth-century universities, like its railroads, were land-grant institutions, vested with warrants to vast acreages under the 1862 Morrill Act. They were thus not only noble outposts of practical learning but also highly appealing vehicles for enterprising captains of land speculation. For these men, to found and run a university combined honor, influence, glory, and a not inconsiderable chance to become very rich. But the Georgist idea that land alone should be taxed – so as not to tax either profits or wages – threatened to create a dangerous political alliance between capital and labor against the landlord.The land-grant universities therefore hired and promoted a retinue of mediocrities willing to wage a war of derision and dismissal against George’s noxious creed. These were the founders of modern American economics, and Gaffney and Harrison document their words, commitments, careerism, and venality in rich detail, leaving no doubt about their true characters and beliefs.[4]

Gaffney's essay in the book,Neo-Classical Economics as a Stratagem against Henry George, gave as examples of Georgists who lost university positionsScott Nearing andAllen H. Eaton.[5]

Reception

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A 1996 review byMurray Milgate calls Gaffney's essay "interesting, provocative, and witty". He states that "Gaffney does highlight the unfolding tension between the reforming ideals of British economists and the ideology of moderate British socialists (to whom George was so important at the time)". He doubts whether Gaffney makes the case that theChicago school of economics was involved in trying to discredit George, as others were, and concludes thatAlfred Marshall was correct in 1884 to judge that George's influence on economics would be transient.[1] A negative review byHerbert Gintis, in which he wrote that "It is not plausible that the neoclassical dog is wagged by the Georgian stump of a tail", had a reply in the form of ananimadversion by Edward J. Dobson of the School of Cooperative Individualism.[6]

The book was called a "conspiratorial history" byMark Skousen.[7] In reviewingThe Corruption of Economics andA Philosophy for a Fair Society, withLand and Taxation (1995) byNicolaus Tideman, all three works being published in the "Georgist Paradigm Series" by Harrison as director of theCentre for Incentive Taxation,Mark Blaug wrote:

There is no doubt that the emergence of themarginal productivity theory in the 1880s was stimulated by the need to find an answer to Henry George's indictment of the prevailingdistribution of income, but that is not to say that the whole of the rise of neoclassical economics can be explained as a defence against Georgism[...][8]

He finds that Gaffney's essay essentially argues in that way; and citesCritics of Henry George. A Century Appraisal of their Strictures on Progress and Poverty (1979) by Robert V. Andelson as a superior source for the debate.[8]

Notes

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  1. ^abcMilgate, Murray (1996)."Review of The Corruption of Economics".Journal of Economic Literature.34 (2):775–777.ISSN 0022-0515.JSTOR 2729235.
  2. ^"The Corruption of Economics / Mason Gaffney and Fred Harrison - Catalogue | National Library of Australia".catalogue.nla.gov.au.
  3. ^Hudson, Michael; Miller, G. J.; Feder, Kris (12 January 2023).A Philosophy for a Fair Society. Shepard-Walwyn (IPG). pp. 11–12.ISBN 978-0-85683-557-5.
  4. ^Galbraith, James K. (23 July 2021)."Dismal Economics by James K. Galbraith".Project Syndicate.
  5. ^"The Stratagem against Henry George"(PDF).masongaffney.org. p. 53.
  6. ^"Edward J. Dodson / Comment on a Review of 'The Corruption of Economics'".www.cooperative-individualism.org.
  7. ^Skousen, Mark (18 May 2015).The Making of Modern Economics: The Lives and Ideas of the Great Thinkers. M.E. Sharpe. p. 233.ISBN 978-0-7656-2827-5.
  8. ^abBlaug, Mark; Gaffney, Mason; Harrison, Fred; Hudson, Michael; Miller, G. J.; Feder, Kris; Tideman, Nicolaus (May 1996). "The Corruption of Economics".The Economic Journal.106 (436): 745.doi:10.2307/2235599.JSTOR 2235599.
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