Oct 19, 2013
The winners of the so-called Nobel Prize for economics were announced this week, and what a peculiar pick: The three who will share the award this year sit on two diametrically opposed sides of their field's most critical debate.
Splitting the prize between Eugene Fama and Lars Peter Hansen (two "magical markets" guys) and Robert Shiller (whose 1992 book, Market Volatility, was all about exactly that) is kind of like splitting the biology prize between Charles Darwin and the Tea Party Creationist Caucus. It makes no sense.
But the prize isn't even a real Nobel. The Nobels were around for 67 years before the prize for economics was created. The economics prize was invented, in fact, by Sweden's central bank in 1968 in a strategic attempt to bestow on the field of economics the same scientific aura and respect accorded to medicine and mathematics and physics. The Swedish bankers leaned heavily toward the magic of the markets idea: Persuade people that money matters are scientific and complicated and best left to them, and you tend to get government off your bank.
But here's the good news: The same week that the pseudo-Nobels were announced, we saw a nationwide celebration of regular people diving into economics. This week was New Economy Week.
"People are realizing, from a very high theoretical level to the level of the street, what is being offered to them is insufficient."Day after day, people all around the country have been showing off their best ideas about stabilizing local businesses and building local democracy. They're considering what they can do to divest from big banks and fossil fuel, and they've marked all their activities on a big online map.
New Economy Week is a project of the New Economy Institute and the New Economy Coalition, a group that, after only a few months, already has 51 members. The organizers' goal was to map 40 events in one week. Halfway through, their map was peppered with 75 events in 17 states and two Canadian provinces.
"People are realizing, from a very high theoretical level to the level of the street, [that] what is being offered to them is insufficient," Bob Massie, President and CEO of the Institute, told me. "The system's broken."
"New Economy groups are emerging all around the country in response to local conditions: transition towns, sustainable business networks, the cooperative movement, local first," added Mike Sandmel, New Economy Week coordinator. "They tend to live in silos. Our goal was to lift up the bigger picture."
In downtown Manhattan, people packed into a community media center in an old brick firehouse to watch David Brancaccio's Fixing the Future and other films in the first-ever New Economy Film Festival.
The online publication Shareable held a "sharing cities map jam," the kickoff action of a new Sharing Cities Network. Shareable wants local people to collaborate to map all the sharing-inclined businesses and projects in their cities.
"We believe that making these oases of sharing visible will be an empowering first step for the network," wrote Shareable's Mira Luna.
What does all this national mapping mean for strong local economies?
"We talk about trans-localism" says Sandmel. "We don't believe in doing things on a bigger scale than you need to, but we do live in an increasingly horizontal world and the new economy movement has a good chance of having an influence if it comes together."
Coming together, talking about sharing, and meddling in money and market matters... Is it mad? Not madder than this year's economics prize. And if the pseudo-Nobels weren't proof enough that something's wrong with leaving private interests to run public affairs, there's always Washington.
What's more crazy: setting up a local tools library in the name of helping struggling families, or, I dunno, closing down the government?
Find out more about New Economy Week here.
Laura Flanders wrote this article for YES! Magazine's Commonomics project. Laura is YES! Magazine's 2013 Local Economies Reporting Fellow.
Keep reading...Show less
Join Us: News for people demanding a better world
Common Dreams is powered by optimists who believe in the power of informed and engaged citizens to ignite and enact change to make the world a better place. We're hundreds of thousands strong, but every single supporter makes the difference. Your contribution supports this bold media model—free, independent, and dedicated to reporting the facts every day. Stand with us in the fight for economic equality, social justice, human rights, and a more sustainable future. As a people-powered nonprofit news outlet, we cover the issues the corporate media never will. |
This article was written for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas and practical actions. Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 License.
Laura Flanders
Laura Flanders interviews forward-thinking people about the key questions of our time on The Laura Flanders Show, a nationally syndicated radio and television program also available as a podcast. A contributing writer to The Nation, Flanders is also the author of six books, including "Bushwomen: How They Won the White House for Their Man" (2005). She is the recipient of a 2019 Izzy Award for excellence in independent journalism, the Pat Mitchell Lifetime Achievement Award for advancing women's and girls' visibility in media, and a 2020 Lannan Cultural Freedom Fellowship for her reporting and advocacy for public media. lauraflanders.org
The winners of the so-called Nobel Prize for economics were announced this week, and what a peculiar pick: The three who will share the award this year sit on two diametrically opposed sides of their field's most critical debate.
Splitting the prize between Eugene Fama and Lars Peter Hansen (two "magical markets" guys) and Robert Shiller (whose 1992 book, Market Volatility, was all about exactly that) is kind of like splitting the biology prize between Charles Darwin and the Tea Party Creationist Caucus. It makes no sense.
But the prize isn't even a real Nobel. The Nobels were around for 67 years before the prize for economics was created. The economics prize was invented, in fact, by Sweden's central bank in 1968 in a strategic attempt to bestow on the field of economics the same scientific aura and respect accorded to medicine and mathematics and physics. The Swedish bankers leaned heavily toward the magic of the markets idea: Persuade people that money matters are scientific and complicated and best left to them, and you tend to get government off your bank.
But here's the good news: The same week that the pseudo-Nobels were announced, we saw a nationwide celebration of regular people diving into economics. This week was New Economy Week.
"People are realizing, from a very high theoretical level to the level of the street, what is being offered to them is insufficient."Day after day, people all around the country have been showing off their best ideas about stabilizing local businesses and building local democracy. They're considering what they can do to divest from big banks and fossil fuel, and they've marked all their activities on a big online map.
New Economy Week is a project of the New Economy Institute and the New Economy Coalition, a group that, after only a few months, already has 51 members. The organizers' goal was to map 40 events in one week. Halfway through, their map was peppered with 75 events in 17 states and two Canadian provinces.
"People are realizing, from a very high theoretical level to the level of the street, [that] what is being offered to them is insufficient," Bob Massie, President and CEO of the Institute, told me. "The system's broken."
"New Economy groups are emerging all around the country in response to local conditions: transition towns, sustainable business networks, the cooperative movement, local first," added Mike Sandmel, New Economy Week coordinator. "They tend to live in silos. Our goal was to lift up the bigger picture."
In downtown Manhattan, people packed into a community media center in an old brick firehouse to watch David Brancaccio's Fixing the Future and other films in the first-ever New Economy Film Festival.
The online publication Shareable held a "sharing cities map jam," the kickoff action of a new Sharing Cities Network. Shareable wants local people to collaborate to map all the sharing-inclined businesses and projects in their cities.
"We believe that making these oases of sharing visible will be an empowering first step for the network," wrote Shareable's Mira Luna.
What does all this national mapping mean for strong local economies?
"We talk about trans-localism" says Sandmel. "We don't believe in doing things on a bigger scale than you need to, but we do live in an increasingly horizontal world and the new economy movement has a good chance of having an influence if it comes together."
Coming together, talking about sharing, and meddling in money and market matters... Is it mad? Not madder than this year's economics prize. And if the pseudo-Nobels weren't proof enough that something's wrong with leaving private interests to run public affairs, there's always Washington.
What's more crazy: setting up a local tools library in the name of helping struggling families, or, I dunno, closing down the government?
Find out more about New Economy Week here.
Laura Flanders wrote this article for YES! Magazine's Commonomics project. Laura is YES! Magazine's 2013 Local Economies Reporting Fellow.
Keep reading...Show less
Laura Flanders
Laura Flanders interviews forward-thinking people about the key questions of our time on The Laura Flanders Show, a nationally syndicated radio and television program also available as a podcast. A contributing writer to The Nation, Flanders is also the author of six books, including "Bushwomen: How They Won the White House for Their Man" (2005). She is the recipient of a 2019 Izzy Award for excellence in independent journalism, the Pat Mitchell Lifetime Achievement Award for advancing women's and girls' visibility in media, and a 2020 Lannan Cultural Freedom Fellowship for her reporting and advocacy for public media. lauraflanders.org
The winners of the so-called Nobel Prize for economics were announced this week, and what a peculiar pick: The three who will share the award this year sit on two diametrically opposed sides of their field's most critical debate.
Splitting the prize between Eugene Fama and Lars Peter Hansen (two "magical markets" guys) and Robert Shiller (whose 1992 book, Market Volatility, was all about exactly that) is kind of like splitting the biology prize between Charles Darwin and the Tea Party Creationist Caucus. It makes no sense.
But the prize isn't even a real Nobel. The Nobels were around for 67 years before the prize for economics was created. The economics prize was invented, in fact, by Sweden's central bank in 1968 in a strategic attempt to bestow on the field of economics the same scientific aura and respect accorded to medicine and mathematics and physics. The Swedish bankers leaned heavily toward the magic of the markets idea: Persuade people that money matters are scientific and complicated and best left to them, and you tend to get government off your bank.
But here's the good news: The same week that the pseudo-Nobels were announced, we saw a nationwide celebration of regular people diving into economics. This week was New Economy Week.
"People are realizing, from a very high theoretical level to the level of the street, what is being offered to them is insufficient."Day after day, people all around the country have been showing off their best ideas about stabilizing local businesses and building local democracy. They're considering what they can do to divest from big banks and fossil fuel, and they've marked all their activities on a big online map.
New Economy Week is a project of the New Economy Institute and the New Economy Coalition, a group that, after only a few months, already has 51 members. The organizers' goal was to map 40 events in one week. Halfway through, their map was peppered with 75 events in 17 states and two Canadian provinces.
"People are realizing, from a very high theoretical level to the level of the street, [that] what is being offered to them is insufficient," Bob Massie, President and CEO of the Institute, told me. "The system's broken."
"New Economy groups are emerging all around the country in response to local conditions: transition towns, sustainable business networks, the cooperative movement, local first," added Mike Sandmel, New Economy Week coordinator. "They tend to live in silos. Our goal was to lift up the bigger picture."
In downtown Manhattan, people packed into a community media center in an old brick firehouse to watch David Brancaccio's Fixing the Future and other films in the first-ever New Economy Film Festival.
The online publication Shareable held a "sharing cities map jam," the kickoff action of a new Sharing Cities Network. Shareable wants local people to collaborate to map all the sharing-inclined businesses and projects in their cities.
"We believe that making these oases of sharing visible will be an empowering first step for the network," wrote Shareable's Mira Luna.
What does all this national mapping mean for strong local economies?
"We talk about trans-localism" says Sandmel. "We don't believe in doing things on a bigger scale than you need to, but we do live in an increasingly horizontal world and the new economy movement has a good chance of having an influence if it comes together."
Coming together, talking about sharing, and meddling in money and market matters... Is it mad? Not madder than this year's economics prize. And if the pseudo-Nobels weren't proof enough that something's wrong with leaving private interests to run public affairs, there's always Washington.
What's more crazy: setting up a local tools library in the name of helping struggling families, or, I dunno, closing down the government?
Find out more about New Economy Week here.
Laura Flanders wrote this article for YES! Magazine's Commonomics project. Laura is YES! Magazine's 2013 Local Economies Reporting Fellow.
Keep reading...Show less
We've had enough. The 1% own and operate the corporate media. They are doing everything they can to defend the status quo, squash dissent and protect the wealthy and the powerful. The Common Dreams media model is different. We cover the news that matters to the 99%. Our mission? To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. How? Nonprofit. Independent. Reader-supported. Free to read. Free to republish. Free to share. With no advertising. No paywalls. No selling of your data. Thousands of small donations fund our newsroom and allow us to continue publishing. Can you chip in? We can't do it without you. Thank you.