January 15, 2020 - 7:00am

One of the most influential ideas of the 2010s was behavioural economics — the modish mash-up of economics and psychology that launched a thousand TED talks. But according to Brandon Kochkodin (writing for Bloomberg) a backlash is underway:

“Drawing on the work of longtime critic Gerd Gigerenzer, an expert in psychology at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, [critics] point to the tendency of those who have embraced its ideas to see biases everywhere — even when there are none. Not only do they bemoan the cottage industry of pseudoscience that’s cropped up around behavioural economics, but they also see some deep, fundamental flaws with its approach.”
- Brandon Kochkodin, Bloomberg

Bursting this intellectual bubble will have consequences, because it’s had a major impact — not just in academia, but also politics and business. Just think of the Behavioural Insights Team (a.k.a. the ‘Downing Street nudge unit’) which was set up by David Cameron in 2010.

Nudge was an influential book published in 2008, but its modish mash-up of economics and psychology is facing a backlash

Behavioural economics offers a fix for the most fundamental problem with standard economics, which is us. Not only do human beings not possess perfect information about the markets we interact with, we also fail to act in predictably rational ways upon the information we do possess. Economists go to all the trouble of producing nice, neat economic models and we have to go and mess them up. How very unreasonable of us.

By reducing the roiling ocean of human illogic to a number of cognitive biases, behavioural economists appear to bring order from chaos. If our various deviations from the path of pure reason can be identified and quantified then, in theory, they can be corrected. Like a shopping cart with a wonky wheel we can be nudged back onto the right course.

Unless of course, the theory doesn’t hold up. In which case, that’s one less fig-leaf for our technocratic ruling class. There’s certainly nothing wrong with taking decisions on the basis of sound scientific evidence, of course; but where this isn’t available, it’s better to act on the basis of openly-stated belief than ersatz objectivity.


Peter Franklin is Associate Editor of UnHerd. He was previously a policy advisor and speechwriter on environmental and social issues.

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