|  Metaphors are 
            important even if they remain unstated. The modern conception of an 
            economy is dominated by the theory of neoclassical economics, whose 
            metaphor is hidden from view for a very good reason: the field would 
            look ridiculous if its roots were front and center. But in the 
            spirit of “Know the truth and it will set you free”, your humble 
            correspondent will attempt to lay bare the foundation of 
            neoclassical economics, and, after having done so, propose a more 
            rational view of economic systems.
  More 
            heat than light
The grand view of life on which neoclassical economics is based 
            is as a system of pipes filled with gas or water. In fact, one of 
            the giants of economics early in the 20th century, Irving Fisher of 
            Yale, actually constructed a model of the economy which was 
            simulated by a miniature plumbing system; his mentor was one of the 
            pioneers of statistical mechanics. The reason for this peculiar 
            metaphor is that such a conception allows for economists to excel in 
            the application of the mathematical techniques used by physicists, 
            and in particular, the methods of statistical mechanics. Much of modern neoclassical economics is based on the work of a 
            French engineer Leon Walras. His General Equilibrium Theory is so 
            important that most economic work must pass the test of being 
            compatible with his theory. Walras, who wrote in the late 19th 
            century, was fascinated by the reigning scientific theory of the 
            day, statistical mechanics (he is said to have kept a copy of a 
            mechanics textbook next to his bed at night).[1] Even though Darwin had finally 
            published his work on evolution, the “big thing” in science was 
            physics, and the big thing in physics, besides the burgeoning field 
            of electrical science, was statistical mechanics.  Classical mechanics, developed by Isaac Newton, dealt with the 
            interaction of two bodies with each other; it would take until far 
            into the 20th century to use Newton’s theory to understand the 
            interaction of even three  bodies (i.e. “three body 
            problem), and even now the math is very difficult. The beauty of 
            statistical mechanics is that it is possible to deal with very large 
            quantities of elements in a statistical manner, using linear algebra 
            and systems of equations, and thereby predict the behavior of fluids 
            such as water and gases such as air, which are made up of billions 
            of molecules.  There are three main properties of a system that can be 
            successfully addressed by statistical mechanics:  
              
                1) There are a large amount of elements;  2) the elements are all the same (homogenous), and therefore, 
                no element or set of elements serves a particular function; and 
                 3) elements are not created, destroyed or changed into other 
                kinds of elements, but stay constant.  Just so, a competitive industry has many firms, they are assumed 
            to be all the same, and though firms go into and out of existence, 
            the capital that they use to produce their goods is assumed to be 
            constant, and technology is assumed not to change. No set of firms 
            serves any specific function. Neoclassical economics is able to use very powerful analytical 
            tools for explaining behavior within competitive industrial sectors 
            with no technological change. These analytical techniques are very 
            effective in the short-term; calculus, after all, is a way to 
            understand forces instantaneously, that is, practically without 
            reference to time. In the grand scheme of general equilibrium 
            theory, prices are all determined according to the various supply 
            and demand factors spread throughout the economy, and prices are 
            determined instantaneously. Time does not exist, technological 
            change does not exist, and perhaps most surprisingly, capital, or at 
            least fixed  capital,[2]  does not exist. Capital illiteracyThe existence of capital has always been a big problem in the 
            field of economics. The “problem” with capital is that it makes more 
            of itself – in other words, it breaks the assumptions of statistical 
            mechanics, that elements are not created or destroyed.[3] Capital reproduces itself – 
            sort of like living things within ecosystems, in fact. Capital 
            therefore inherently creates positive feedback loops – that is, the 
            increase of something increases the chances that the thing will 
            increase even further. But if you put positive feedback loops into a 
            system of fluids or gases, you get what is called turbulence – and 
            thus was born the field of “chaos” theory, or more properly, 
            nonlinear dynamics, within the fields of physics and chemistry. But 
            neoclassical economics is definitely not amenable to positive 
            feedback loops.[4] And so, if the choice is 
            between throwing out neoclassical economic theory or capital, the 
            choice is obvious – capital, be gone! Thus, economists  
              
                
                  can’t explain economic growth, 
                  can’t integrate capital or technological innovation into 
                  their models, and 
                  can’t explain how the various industries in an economy fit 
                  together.  Other than that, it’s a great theory. It can explain how and why 
            prices change, within a particular competitive industry, in a very 
            short period of time. As luck would have it, just as neoclassical economics was 
            solidifying by using the cutting-edge of physics, physics passed 
            economics by and embarked on the great period of the elaboration of 
            the theories of relativity and quantum physics. By the late 20th 
            century, biology had surpassed physics as the most important science 
            – in other words, it got more funding – and ecosystem and 
            evolutionary theory could not only incorporate phenomena like 
            reproduction, change, and growth, these concepts became the very 
            core of these sciences.  Metaphor Evolution Ecosystems 
            are not conceived of as a set of similar elements, they are modeled 
            as a set of functional niches, a set of elements including climate, 
            landscape, plants, animals or fungi, set within a complex whole. The 
            pieces all fit together. There are not a large enough number of 
            niches to enable the use of statistical methods. The largest 
            aggregation of niches in an ecosystem are called trophic levels, 
            which is a fancy way of saying that plants produce the main biomass 
            of an ecosystem; herbivores (mainly) consume what the plants 
            produce; and carnivores consume the herbivores (sometimes called 
            secondary consumers). Finally, there are the detrivores such as 
            worms, fungi and bacteria that break down the dead plant and animal 
            life, and make the released resources available to the producers in 
            the form of soil. Within each level there may be greater detail, 
            such as the various parts of a tree, or depths in a lake or ocean, 
            and these are considered separate niches.
 The species within a niche may change in the process of 
            evolution, but the niche endures; the niches may eventually be 
            reconfigured, but the ecosystem is sustained. Scientists studying 
            the dynamics of ecosystems and species change do not dismiss change 
            as in neoclassical economics, they spend most of their time trying 
            to understand it.  Each 
            niche serves a particular function, and if enough of these functions 
            collapse, the entire ecosystem will collapse. For instance, at one 
            point killer whales had eliminated most sea otters from parts of the 
            pacific northwest. Without sea otters to eat them, the sea urchin 
            population exploded, almost eliminating the kelp forests that were 
            critical to the survival of most species. Only by bringing the sea 
            otter back from the brink was the ecosystem saved. E.O. Wilson calls 
            species such as the sea otter a keystone  species, 
            because some species are very central to the functioning of an 
            ecosystem.[5] For similar reasons, wolves 
            have been reintroduced in parts of the American west, in order to 
            keep deer under control that would otherwise devastate plant 
            niches .
 Neoclassical economics cannot admit of concepts such as keystone 
            species or self-reinforcing change or structure based on function. 
            As I have argued on this site, manufacturing is an absolutely 
            essential part of a modern wealthy economy. Manufacturing, it might 
            be said, is like a keystone species. Without the functionality of 
            manufacturing, the economy collapses. Manufacturing is actually more 
            like a trophic level, that is, it is the main production subsystem 
            of the larger system known as the economy. What is produced is then 
            distributed, in what we may call a distribution system. In the 
            distribution system of the economy we find retail, wholesale, 
            services such as advertising, and perhaps most importantly, finance, 
            which redirects the surplus generated by the production system. Services are almost always produced using or servicing goods, so 
            the service sector of an economy may be seen as a level that both 
            “consumes” (or uses) manufactured goods and produces services.  Within manufacturing we can identify three further levels, or 
            stages. The outermost stage is the arena of the production of 
            consumer goods, such as cars or clothes. In order to create these 
            consumer goods, production machinery must be produced; it is the 
            production machinery that is used within a factory or construction 
            site that makes consumer goods possible.  Finally, at the very center of the production system we have what 
            I have called “reproduction machinery”, machines such as machine 
            tools, steel-making machinery, electricity-producing turbines, and 
            semiconductor-making machinery, that both make more of themselves 
            and produce production machinery. Unlike General Equilibrium Theory, 
            fixed capital – machinery, essentially – is at the heart of the 
            economic system.   Without all of these levels – distribution, services, consumer 
            goods, production machinery, and reproduction machinery – a modern, 
            wealthy economy would not be possible. The economy is an ecosystem, 
            not a system of pipes.  Metaphor 
            Metaphysics
Each of these levels of production can also be divided into a 
            category of production – a way of looking at each level to see what 
            functions are served by various kinds of goods. For instance, 
            steel-making machinery is the most important way of creating a 
            material. Creating a material – steel, cloth, wood, plastic – is 
            essential to any manufacturing system. So a 
            material-making  function is a critical function. Once 
            we have a material, that material must be shaped into something 
            useful – an axle, wood part in a piece of furniture, shape of cloth 
            – which is done by certain types of machinery, such as machine 
            tools, woodworking machinery, or textile machinery. Just as the 
            Greeks discussed form and content, so it is useful to talk about a 
            structure-forming category of production and a 
            material-making category of production. Metaphysics is also 
            MetaEngineering. In order to create form and content, we need two other categories 
            of production – information-processing  and energy 
            conversion . The “computer revolution”, and more recently, the 
            internet boom, has contributed greatly to the productivity of 
            manufacturing, in addition to retailing and searching. Without the 
            widespread use of electricity, we would have a much lower standard 
            of living, because manufacturing would be a much more difficult 
            thing to do. However, it is in the energy category in particular that we find, 
            shall we say, a certain difficulty: fossil fuels come from outside 
            the production system. Oil, coal, and natural gas exploration, 
            extraction, and refining are among the most sophisticated 
            manufacturing technologies yet developed, and most fossil fuels 
            would not be usable without them; the reason fossil fuels are used 
            and valued is because they power machinery. However, the fossil 
            fuels themselves come from the Earth  Towards a modern energy sector Ideally, 
            the raw materials of an industrial system should be almost free. 
            Iron and silicon, the basis of steel and semiconductors, are both 
            very abundant in the Earth’s crust. The category of material-making 
            is often very dependent on much scarcer materials, however. As the 
            recent rise in commodity prices indicates, we are coming to the end 
            of the period when raw materials were cheap and easy to find. 
            Indeed, considering that mining is one of the most environmentally 
            destructive activities known to man or nature,[6] the true costs of raw materials 
            has never been ascertained by the market. However, we are now at the 
            point that most steel is being recycled, and it should be possible 
            to provide for most if not all raw materials through recycling from 
            now on.
 Fossil fuels, on the other hand, can’t even be recycled. Assuming 
            that replacing them with biofuels is problematic, the obvious 
            solution is truly renewable energy, that is, using wind, solar 
            power, and geothermal and water power as the energy source, and 
            constructing machinery to capture these sources of energy. Humans 
            should concentrate on what they are good at, creating machinery, not 
            what they are bad at, managing resources. Because the energy sector, and to a lesser extent, the materials 
            sector, are using up their own supply, the current global economic 
            system is heading for collapse, just as any ecosystem that is using 
            up the basis for its production would eventually collapse. Collapse 
            is different than catastrophe, or as it has been termed in the 
            literature, “release”;[7] forest fires are part of the 
            forest’s natural cycle, and indeed the forest ecosystem is dependent 
            on occasional fires. Even a meteor hitting the Earth 65 million 
            years ago wiped out niches that mammals, and eventually humans, were 
            able to fill. But at least in the time period of centuries, when a 
            formerly lush area turns to desert or rock, we may consider this as 
            more or less a permanent collapse. And when an economy is based on 
            fossil fuels then the disappearance of fossil fuels will mean the 
            collapse of the industrial economic ecosystem.    Phoenix                                                
            Phoenix This collapse is a distinct possibility because humans have not 
            learned to turn their industrial system into a cycle, as natural 
            ecosystems do. The least heralded trophic level, the function served 
            by the detrivores, has not been taken seriously. Even in beginning 
            ecology lessons this literally lowly level may be ignored. But 
            besides the natural solar energy, water, carbon, and nitrogen 
            cycles, the detrivores provide the raw material on which ecosystems 
            depend. Perhaps the meek shall yet inherit the earth, because worms 
            certainly create  the earth. The sustainable mode of productionKarl Marx famously predicted that a socialist mode of production 
            would follow a capitalist mode of production. He based his 
            historical progression on the relations of production, basically 
            from slavery to capitalism to socialism. As I have argued in “Why 
            a Democratic Economy would be a more efficient economy”, an 
            essential characteristic of an efficient economy would be to create 
            a society in which firms were operated and owned by their employees. 
            But this would be one part of a wider transformation to a 
            sustainable mode of production. I ndeed, 
            as Dale Allen Pfeiffer points out in “Eating fossil fuels”, the main 
            mode of production before  fossil fuels was one of 
            slavery, because without fossil fuels slavery is perhaps the only 
            way to coax enough industrial energy out of humans to make 
            industrial processes work. Perhaps Max Weber is partly correct to 
            write of the capitalist spirit of Protestantism, and perhaps Marx is 
            partly correct to explain the premodern precursors of capitalism. 
            But capitalism was also made possible by fossil fuels because it 
            made it possible to free up most human labor from what had 
            previously been the need to provide the basic energy for the 
            economic system. By 1870, when both American slavery and Russian 
            serfdom had been destroyed, the fossil-fuel based industrial system 
            was taking off. It is therefore scary to contemplate what mode of 
            production might follow the decline and fall of fossil fuels, unless 
            the industrial system becomes truly sustainable. There is a long history of the discussion of the ideas of man vs. 
            nature, or man outside of nature, or man in nature. The first and 
            second views (held by Marx, by the way), are breathtakingly ignorant 
            (the more polite label is “cornucopian”). Obviously, if you run out 
            of something, you can’t make anything that depends on that 
            something. Or if you destroy the ecosystems that you depend on for 
            your agriculture and cities, you can’t survive.  But even the third view, that man is a part of nature, has tended 
            not to view the industrial economy as being part of nature. Of 
            course, the industrial economy has been the great destroyer of 
            ecosystems, but this doesn’t mean that an industrial economy is not 
            part of the ecosystem. After all, a volcano is part of the ecosystem 
            (although in the long run volcanoes are responsible for much of the 
            raw material of ecosystems, unlike industrial economies, which turn 
            useful ecological material into useless ecological poisons).  The preindustrial, indigenous peoples of the earth usually 
            managed to live in relative harmony with their ecosystems. If the 
            industrial ecosystem can manage to change from a linear sequence of 
            mining, processing, and polluting, to a circular system of 
            processing and recycling, if the snake can grab its own tail, to use 
            a Native American image, then perhaps humanity can tread the Earth 
            lightly, even with six billion people.   
              You can contact Jon Rynn directly on his jonrynn.blogspot.com . 
              You can also find old blog entries and longer articles at 
              economicreconstruction.com. Please feel free to reach him at 
              
              
              
              
              This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need 
              Javascript enabled to view it
              
               . [1]  The classic work on the 
            statistical mechanical nature of economics is Philip Mirowski’s 
            More heat than light , Cambridge University Press, 1989, from 
            which many of the ideas of the first paragraphs were taken.  [2]  Fixed capital was 
            defined initially by Adam Smith as, basically, the means of 
            production, that is, the plant and machinery that was fixed and used 
            to make more wealth. Circulating capital, according to Smith, are 
            the intermediate goods that exist within the market before the goods 
            turn into final goods. Circulating capital, not fixed capital, is 
            represented in the general equilibrium model. [3]  Joseph Schumpeter’s 
            phrase, “creative destruction”, is constantly thrown around by 
            economists, but it is the only major concept of his that they use, 
            and it does not pervade the conceptual core of economics, which we 
            are concerned with here. [4]  For a more detailed 
            discussion of the problems of economics, growth, and capital, see my 
            dissertation chapter on the subject, available at the following link 
            .
 [5]  E. O. Wilson, The 
            Diversity of Life , 1999. [6]  J. R. McNeill, 
            Something New Under the Sun; an environmental history of the 20th 
            century , 2001. [7]  Gunderson and Holling, 
            Panarchy: Understanding transformations in human and natural 
            systems , 2001. 
            
            
            This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need 
            Javascript enabled to view it
            
             
 |