- Positive economics
Positive economics is the branch of
economics that concerns the description and explanation of economic phenomena (Wong, 1987, p. 920). It focuses on facts and cause-and-effect relationships and includes the development and testing of economics theories. Earlier terms were value-free economics and its German counterpart wertfrei economics. These terms were challenged as persuasive rather than descriptive.Positive economics as
science (Robbins, "1932)" concerns analysis of economicbehavior . A standard theoretical statement of positive economics as operationally meaningful theorems is inPaul Samuelson (1947). Positive economics as such avoids economic value judgements. For example, a positive economictheory might describe howmoney supply growth affectsinflation , but it does not provide any instruction on whatpolicy "ought to" be followed.Still, positive economics is commonly deemed necessary for the ranking of economic policies or outcomes as to acceptability (Wong, 1987, p. 921), which is
normative economics . Positive economics is sometimes defined as the economics of "what is", whereas normative economics discusses "what ought to be". The distinction was exposited byJohn Neville Keynes (1891) and elaborated byMilton Friedman in an influential 1953 essay.The metholodogical basis for a positive/normative distinction has its roots in the
fact-value distinction in philosophy, the principal proponents of such distinctions beingDavid Hume andG. E. Moore . The logical basis of such a relation as adichotomy has been disputed in the philosophical literature. Such debates are reflected in discussion ofpositive science and specifically in economics, where critics, such asGunnar Myrdal (1954) dispute the idea that economics can be completely neutral and agenda-free.To illustrate, an example of a positive economic statement is as follows:
*The price of milk has risen from $3 a gallon to $5 a gallon in the past five years.
This is a positive statement because it can be proven true or false by comparison against real world data. In this case, the statement focuses on facts.
See also
*
Normative economics
*Philosophy of economics
*Consumer theory
*Production possibilities frontier
*Supply and demand
*Distribution (economics)
*Economic methodology
*Austrian School References
* Milton Friedman (1953). "The Methodology of Positive Economics," "Essays in Positive Economics"
* Daniel M. Hausman and Michael S. McPherson (1996). "Economic Analysis and Moral Philosophy", "Appendix: How could ethics matter to econonics?", pp. 211-20: ::A.2: Objection 2: Positive economics is value-free::A.3: How positive economics involves morality
* John Neville Keynes (1891). [http://socserv.mcmaster.ca/econ/ugcm/3ll3/keynesjn/Scope.pdf "The Scope and Method of Political Economy"]
* Richard G. Lipsey (2008). "positive economics."The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics ". Second Edition. [http://www.dictionaryofeconomics.com/article?id=pde2008_P000130&q=positive%20economics&topicid=&result_number=1 Abstract.]
* Gunnar Myrdal (1954 [1929] ). "The Political Element in the Development of Economic Theory", trans. Paul Streeten (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press).
* Lionel Robbins (1932). "An Essay on the Nature and Significance of Economic Science "
* Paul A. Samuelson (1947, Enlarged ed. 1983). "Foundations of Economic Analysis "
* Stanley Wong (1987). “positive economics," The , v. 3, pp. 920-21External links
* Milton Friedman ( [1953] 1966). [http://academic2.american.edu/~dfagel/Class%20Readings/Friedman/Methodology.pdf "The Methodology of Positive Economics,"] excerpts from Friedman's essay
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