Professor (em.) ALAN KIRMAN (Université d'Aix-Marseille) will give a lecture on
"The crisis in economic theory"
TIME AND PLACE:
Thursday, September 1st, 18:15 – 19:15
Small Festival Hall (Pieni Juhlasali), University Main Building
ABSTRACT:
In this presentation I will discuss modern macroeconomic and financial  models in the light of the current crisis. Theory has been revealed to  be inadequate in its explanation of the origins and the nature of the  crisis, as Jean-Claude Trichet the Governor of the European Central bank  and his colleagues at other central banks have indicated. Basic  macroeconomic models, however sophisticated have continued to be based  on the same foundations shown to be wanting in the 1970s and financial  market models have continued to use the « efficient markets hypothesis »  despite warnings by numerous mathematicians and economists since 1900  as to its unsound foundations. I will not dwell on the details of  standard macroeconomic models but will suggest some ways forward. We  need to construct models, which may not be able to predict the timing of  the onset of a crisis but will encompass the possibility of one. The  most promising candidates for such models are those, which view the  economy as a complex adaptive system, may use some of the tools of  statistical physics and do not necessarily use the standard equilibrium  approach. Such models put the interactions between individuals in the  centre of the picture, and reveal how major changes in the states of the  economy can result, as in many models in physics and in biology, from  relatively minor changes in key parameters. Crises are a characteristic  of the endogenous dynamics of the system and not the result of some  unspecified exogenous shocks.
The visiting lecture is a part of the IX conference of the International Network of
Economic Methodology (INEM 2011), but OPEN FOR ALL.
For further enquiries, please contact paivi.a.seppala(at)helsinki.fi
Welcome!
 
