How economists and non-economists could get along better

Photo: iStock
Photo: iStock
4 min read . Updated: 11 Mar 2021, 10:16 PM IST Dani Rodrik

Economists have never been shy about taking on the big questions that disciplines such as history, sociology or political science consider their province. What have been slavery’s long-run implications for contemporary American society? Why do some communities exhibit higher levels of social trust than others? What explains the rise of right-wing populism in recent years?

In addressing these and many other non-economic issues, economists have gone well beyond their bread-and-butter preoccupation with supply and demand. This transgression of disciplinary boundaries is not always welcomed. Other scholars object (often correctly) that economists do not bother to familiarize themselves with existing work in relevant disciplines. They complain (again rightly) about an inhospitable academic culture. Replete with interruptions and aggressive questioning, economics seminars can seem to outsiders more akin to an inquisition than a forum for colleagues to communicate results and probe ideas. Perhaps the most important source of tension, however, arises from the methods economists bring to their research. Economists rely on statistical tools to demonstrate that a particular underlying factor had a ‘causal’ effect on an outcome of interest. Often misunderstood, this method can be the source of endless and unproductive conflict between economists and others.

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Understanding the advantages (and limitations) of economists’ method clarifies the value they can add to analysis of non-economic questions. Equally important, it underscores how economists’ approach can complement but never replace alternative and often qualitative methods used in other scholarly disciplines. It helps to begin with the idea of causality itself. In the sciences, we acquire knowledge about causation in one of two ways. Either we start from a cause and try to identify its effects. Or we start from the effect and try to ascertain its cause(s).

Economists are obsessed with the first of these approaches—forward causal inference. The most highly prized empirical research is that which demonstrates that an exogenous variation in some underlying cause X has a predictable and significant effect on an outcome of interest Y.

In the natural sciences, causal effects are measured using lab experiments that can isolate the consequences of variations in physical conditions on the effect of interest. Economists sometimes mimic this method through randomized social experiments. For example, households might be randomly assigned to a cash grant scheme to discover the consequences of additional income.

More often than not, history and social life do not permit lab-like conditions that allow the effects of changes in the human condition to be precisely ascertained and measured. Economists resort to imaginative statistical techniques instead.

For example, they might document a statistical association between an exogenous factor such as rainfall and the incidence of civil conflict, allowing them to infer that changes in income levels (due to fluctuations in agricultural output) are a cause of civil wars. Note the key piece of ingenuity here: because civil wars cannot influence weather patterns, the correlation between the two must be due to one-way causality in the other direction.

Well-done research in this style can be a beautiful thing to behold and a significant accomplishment. Yet, it might leave a historian or a political scientist cold.

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This is because the economists’ method does not yield an answer to the question “what causes civil conflict" (the reverse causal inference question). It merely provides evidence on one of the causes (income fluctuations), which may not even be one of the more important factors. Worse, because economists are trained only in the forward-induction approach, they often present their research as if the partial answer is in fact the more comprehensive one.

In their quest for statistical ‘identification’ of a causal effect, economists often have to resort to techniques that answer either a narrower or a somewhat different version of the question that motivated the research in the first place.

So, economists’ research can rarely substitute for more complete works of synthesis, which consider a multitude of causes, weigh likely effects, and address spatial and temporal variation of causal mechanisms. Work of this kind is more likely to be undertaken by historians and non-quantitatively oriented social scientists.

Judgement necessarily plays a larger role in this kind of research, which in turn leaves greater room for dispute about the validity of the conclusions. Nevertheless, such work is essential. Economists would not even know where to start without the work of historians, ethnographers and other social scientists who provide rich narratives of phenomena and hypothesize possible causes, but do not claim causal certainty.

Economists can be justifiably proud of the power of their statistical and analytical methods. But they need to be more self-conscious about these tools’ limitations.

Ultimately, our understanding of the social world is enriched by both styles of research. Economists and other scholars should embrace the diversity of their academic approaches, instead of dismissing or taking umbrage at work done in adjacent disciplines. ©2021/Project Syndicate

Dani Rodrik is professor of international political economy at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government

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