Did you know that economists can tell us how much we should care about future generations or how risk averse we ought to be? Yeah, me neither!
I’ve recently found myself increasingly irritated at the way economics (or, worse, a popularized version of it) has begun to function as a kind of master narrative among our pundit classes and the airport bookstore set. In fact, one of the things that prompted me to rethink my former mostly uncritical support for free trade was that I got sick of condescending economists telling me I shouldn’t care about things like whether the stuff I buy was made in a sweatshop, or whether my hometown is being hollowed out by de-industrialization.
This new style of economic punditry creates the illusion of promising value-free solutions to political conflicts. And it allows dissenters to be dismissed as economically illiterate troglodytes. I don’t generally buy into the more catastrophic critiques of political liberalism offered by thinkers like Alasdair MacIntyre, but I can’t help but wonder if this econo-mania is a way of filling the vacuum left when moral debate has been expunged from the public sphere.

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