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Economics
on Trial
IDEAS ON LIBERTY
April 2000
What
It Takes to Be an Objective Scholar
by Mark Skousen
"It
was the facts that changed my mind." -Julian Simon (1)
During
the 1990s we watched the Dow Jones Industrial Average increase
fourfold and Nasdaq stocks tenfold. Yet there were well-known
investment advisers-some of them my friends-who were bearish
during the entire period, missing out on the greatest bull
market in history. (2)
How is
this possible? What kind of prejudices would keep an intelligent
analyst from missing an overwhelming trend? In the financial
business the key to success is a willingness to change your
mind when you're wrong. Stubbornness can be financially ruinous.
When a market goes against you, you should always ask, "What
am I missing?"
Over
the years, I've encountered three kinds of investment analysts:
those who are always bullish; those who are always bearish;
and those whose outlook depends on market conditions. I've
found that the third type, the most flexible, are the most
successful on Wall Street.
Confessions
of a Gold-Bug Technician
A good
friend of mine is a technical analyst who searches the movement
of prices, volume, and other technical indicators to determine
the direction of stocks and commodities. Most financial technicians
are free of prejudices and will invest their money wherever
they see a positive upward trend, and avoid (or sell short)
markets that are seen in a downward trend. But my friend is
a gold bug and no matter what the charts show, he somehow
interprets them to suggest that gold is ready to reverse its
downward trend and head back up. Equally, he always seems
to think the stock market has peaked and is headed south.
As a result, throughout the entire 1990s he missed out on
the great bull market on Wall Street and lost his shirt chasing
gold stocks.
I also
see this type of prejudice in the academic world. Some analysts
are anti-market no matter what. Take, for example, Lester
Brown, president of the Worldwatch Institute in Washington,
D.C., who puts out the annual State of the World and
other alarmist surveys and data. He gathers together all kinds
of statistics and graphs showing a decline in our standard
of living and the growing threat of population growth, environmental
degradation, the spread of the AIDS virus, and so on. For
example, despite clear evidence of sharply lower fertility
rates in most nations, Brown concludes, "stabilizing population
may be the most difficult challenge of all." (3)
Too bad
Julian Simon, the late professor of economics at the University
of Maryland, is no longer around to dispute Brown and the
environmental doomsdayers. Simon was as optimistic about the
world as Brown is pessimistic. Simon's last survey of world
economic conditions, The State of Humanity, was published
in 1995. That book, along with his The Ultimate Resource (and
its second edition), came to the exact opposite of Brown's
conclusions. "Our species is better off in just about every
measurable material way." (4)
Yet Julian
Simon was not simply a Pollyanna optimist. He let the facts
affect his thinking. In the 1960s, Simon was deeply worried
about population and nuclear war, just like Lester Brown,
Paul Ehrlich, and their colleagues. But Simon changed his
mind after investigating and discovering that "the available
empirical data did not support that theory." (5)
Scholars
Who See the Light
The best
scholars are those willing to change their minds after looking
at the data or discovering a new principle. They admit their
mistakes when they have been proven wrong. You don't see it
happen often, though. Once a scholar has built a reputation
around a certain point of view and has published books and
articles on his pet theory, it's almost impossible to recant.
This propensity applies to scholars across the political spectrum.
We admire
those rare intellectuals who are honest enough to admit that
their past views were wrong. For example, when New York historian
Richard Gid Powers began his history of the anticommunist
movement, his attitude was pejorative. He had previously written
a highly negative book on J. Edgar Hoover, Secrecy and
Power. Yet after several years of painstaking research,
he changed his mind: "Writing this book radically altered
my view of American anticommunism. I began with the idea that
anticommunism displayed America at its worst, but I came to
see in anticommunism America at its best." (6) That's my kind
of scholar.
1. Julian
L. Simon, The Ultimate Resource 2 (Princeton, N.J.:
Princeton University Press, 1996), preface.
2. See the revealing article, "Down and Out on Wall Street,"
New York Times, Money & Business Section, Sunday,
December 26, 1999.
3. Lester R. Brown, Gary Gardner, and Brian Halweil, Beyond
Malthus (New York: Norton, 1999), p. 30.
4. Julian L. Simon, The State of Humanity (Cambridge,
Mass.: Blackwell, 1995), p. 1.
5. Simon, The Ultimate Resource 2, preface.
6. Richard Gid Powers, Not Without Honor: The History of
American Anticommunism (Free Press, 1996), p. 503.
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