Title of article :
The futility of utility: how market dynamics marginalize Adam Smith
Author/Authors :
Joseph L. McCauley، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Pages :
33
From page :
506
To page :
538
Abstract :
Economic theorizing is based on the postulated, nonempiric notion of utility. Economists assume that prices, dynamics, and market equilibria are supposed to be derived from utility. The results are supposed to represent mathematically the stabilizing action of Adam Smithʹs invisible hand. In deterministic excess demand dynamics I show the following. A utility function generally does not exist mathematically due to nonintegrable dynamics when production/investment are accounted for, resolving Mirowskiʹs thesis. Price as a function of demand does not exist mathematically either. All equilibria are unstable. I then explain how deterministic chaos can be distinguished from random noise at short times. In the generalization to liquid markets and finance theory described by stochastic excess demand dynamics, I also show the following. Market price distributions cannot be rescaled to describe price movements as ‘equilibrium’ fluctuations about a systematic drift in price. Utility maximization does not describe equilibrium. Maximization of the Gibbs entropy of the observed price distribution of an asset would describe equilibrium, if equilibrium could be achieved, but equilibrium does not describe real, liquid markets (stocks, bonds, foreign exchange). There are three inconsistent definitions of equilibrium used in economics and finance, only one of which is correct. Prices in unregulated free markets are unstable against both noise and rising or falling expectations: Adam Smithʹs stabilizing invisible hand does not exist, either in mathematical models of liquid market data, or in real market data.
Journal title :
Physica A Statistical Mechanics and its Applications
Serial Year :
2000
Journal title :
Physica A Statistical Mechanics and its Applications
Record number :
866764
Link To Document :
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