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Homo economicus

The term Homo economicus, or economic man, is the portrayal of humans as agents who are consistently rational and narrowly self-interested, and who pursue their subjectively defined ends optimally. It is a word play on Homo sapiens, used in some economic theories and in pedagogy.[1]

In game theory, Homo economicus is often modelled through the assumption of perfect rationality. It assumes that agents always act in a way that maximize utility as a consumer and profit as a producer,[2] and are capable of arbitrarily complex deductions towards that end. They will always be capable of thinking through all possible outcomes and choosing that course of action which will result in the best possible result.

The rationality implied in Homo economicus does not restrict what sort of preferences are admissible. Only naive applications of the Homo economicus model assume that agents know what is best for their long-term physical and mental health. For example, an agent's utility function could be linked to the perceived utility of other agents (such as one's husband or children), making Homo economicus compatible with other models such as Homo reciprocans, which emphasizes human cooperation.

As a theory on human conduct, it contrasts to the concepts of behavioral economics, which examines cognitive biases and other irrationalities, and to bounded rationality, which assumes that practical elements such as cognitive and time limitations restrict the rationality of agents.

History of the term Edit

The term "economic man" was used for the first time in the late nineteenth century by critics of John Stuart Mill's work on political economy.[3] Below is a passage from Mill's work that critics referred to:

[Political economy] does not treat the whole of man's nature as modified by the social state, nor of the whole conduct of man in society. It is concerned with him solely as a being who desires to possess wealth, and who is capable of judging the comparative efficacy of means for obtaining that end.[4]

Later in the same work, Mill stated that he was proposing "an arbitrary definition of man, as a being who inevitably does that by which he may obtain the greatest amount of necessaries, conveniences, and luxuries, with the smallest quantity of labour and physical self-denial with which they can be obtained."

Adam Smith, in The Theory of Moral Sentiments, had claimed that individuals have sympathy for the well-being of others. On the other hand, in The Wealth of Nations, Smith wrote:

It is not from the benevolence of the butcher, the brewer, or the baker that we expect our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest.[5]

This comment is perfectly in line with the notion of Homo economicus and the idea, propounded by Smith in The Wealth of Nations and, in the 20th century, by the likes of Ayn Rand (in The Virtue of Selfishness, for example), that pursuing narrow, individual self-interest promotes social well-being. In Book V, Chapter I, Smith argues, "The man whose whole life is spent in performing a few simple operations, of which the effects are perhaps always the same, or very nearly the same, has no occasion to exert his understanding or to exercise his invention in finding out expedients for removing difficulties which never occur. He naturally loses, therefore, the habit of such exertion, and generally becomes as stupid and ignorant as it is possible for a human creature to become." This could be seen as prefiguring one part of Marx's theory of alienation of labor; and also as a pro-worker argument against the division of labor and the restrictions it places upon freedom of occupation. But even so, taken in the context of the work as a whole, Smith clearly intends it in a pro-capitalism, pro-bourgeoisie, way: "removing difficulties", such as reducing the time needed for travel and trade, through "expedients", such as steam-engine ships, here means the typical argument that capitalism brings freedom of entrepreneurship and innovation, which then bring prosperity. Thus, Smith is not unreasonably called "The Father of Capitalism"; early on, he theorized many of today's most widespread and deep-seated pro-capitalism arguments.

The early role of Homo Economicus within neoclassical theory was summarised to include a general objective of discovering laws and principles to accelerate further growth within the national economy and the welfare of ordinary citizens. These laws and principles were determined by two governing factors, natural and social.[6] It had been found to be the foundation of neoclassical theory of the firm which assumed that individual agents would act rationally amongst other rational individuals.[7] In which Adam Smith explains that the actions of those that are rational and self-interested under homo economicus promotes the general good overall which was understood as the efficient allocation of material wealth. However, social scientists had doubted the actual importance of income and wealth to overall happiness in societies.[8]

The term had initially been used to criticise the nature of the economic agent that Smith and Mill had illustrated heavily in their writings. It had been stated that from an analytical perspective, Mill’s contribution to the development of Homo Economicus was one of great importance where he was able to define the political economy with differing aspects of production and the distribution of wealth. However, Adam Smith had been the first to demonstrate that under appropriate policies and an economic system that national prosperity could occur due to the selfishness of individuals.[6]

Economists in the late 19th century—such as Francis Edgeworth, William Stanley Jevons, Léon Walras, and Vilfredo Pareto—built mathematical models on these economic assumptions. In the 20th century, the rational choice theory of Lionel Robbins came to dominate mainstream economics. The term "economic man" then took on a more specific meaning: a person who acted rationally on complete knowledge out of self-interest and the desire for wealth.

Model Edit

Homo economicus is a term used for an approximation or model of Homo sapiens that acts to obtain the highest possible well-being for themself given available information about opportunities and other constraints, both natural and institutional, on their ability to achieve their predetermined goals. This approach has been formalized in certain social sciences models, particularly in economics.

The model of the homo economicus is currently the most widespread model of human behaviour in economics. There are still limitations in developing this model through the years of social development.[9] Human nature is complex and full of contradictions. People can do deeds that are full of justice or they can do deeds that are annoying. In the vast majority of cases people are selfish and unselfish, depending on various natures. The Homo economicus model is usually based on pure self-interest in order to activate cooperation and thus contribute to society. Within economic social systems, humans are usually rational and selfish maximising personal preferences, and this form of model is also known as Homo economicus. within the homo economicus model, the principle of rationality and selfishness is well chosen. Given the same conditions, people only want to get more, not less. This is why managers can increase productivity through incentive policies.[10]

Homo economicus is usually seen as "rational" in the sense that well-being as defined by the utility function is optimized given perceived opportunities.[11] That is, the individual seeks to attain very specific and predetermined goals to the greatest extent with the least possible cost. Note that this kind of "rationality" does not say that the individual's actual goals are "rational" in some larger ethical, social, or human sense, only that they try to attain them at minimal cost. Only naïve applications of the Homo economicus model assume that this hypothetical individual knows what is best for their long-term physical and mental health and can be relied upon to always make the right decision for themself. See rational choice theory and rational expectations for further discussion; the article on rationality widens the discussion.

As in social science, these assumptions are at best approximations. The term is often used derogatorily in academic literature, perhaps most commonly by sociologists, many of whom tend to prefer structural explanations to ones based on rational action by individuals.

The use of the Latin form Homo economicus is certainly long established; Persky[3] traces it back to Pareto (1906)[12] but notes that it may be older. The English term economic man can be found even earlier, in John Kells Ingram's A History of Political Economy (1888).[13] The Oxford English Dictionary (O.E.D.) cites the use of Homo oeconomicus by C. S. Devas in his 1883 work The Groundwork of Economics in reference to Mill's writings, as one of a number of phrases that imitate the scientific name for the human species:

Mill has only examined the Homo oeconomicus, or dollar-hunting animal.[14]

According to the OED, the human genus name Homo is

Used with L. or mock-L. adjs. in names imitating Homo sapiens, etc., and intended to personify some aspect of human life or behaviour (indicated by the adj.). Homo faber ("feIb@(r)) [H. Bergson L'Evolution Créatrice (1907) ii. 151], a term used to designate man as a maker of tools.) Variants are often comic: Homo insipiens; Homo turisticus.[15]

Note that such forms should logically keep the capital for the "genus" name—i.e., Homo economicus rather than homo economicus. Actual usage is inconsistent.

Amartya Sen has argued there are grave pitfalls in assuming that rationality is limited to selfish rationality. Economics should build into its assumptions the notion that people can give credible commitments to a course of conduct. He demonstrates the absurdity with the narrowness of the assumptions by some economists with the following example of two strangers meeting on a street.[16]

"Where is the railway station?" he asks me. "There," I say, pointing at the post office, "and would you please post this letter for me on the way?" "Yes," he says, determined to open the envelope and check whether it contains something valuable.

Criticisms Edit

Homo economicus bases its choices on a consideration of its own personal "utility function".

In recent times, few concepts have been as recognisable and accepted as the concept of the homo economicus. The system established by this concept has therefore almost become the basis for the concepts currently used in economics. As society develops and the modern economy evolves, will people follow the concept of the homo economicus.[17]"Self-interest is the main motivation of human beings in their transactions" is a theoretical structure in the concept of homo economicus. Over the years, economists have studied and discussed institutional economics, behavioural economics, political economy, economic anthropology and ecological economics. The economic man solution is considered to be inadequate and flawed.[18]

Consequently, the Homo economicus assumptions have been criticized not only by economists on the basis of logical arguments, but also on empirical grounds by cross-cultural comparison. Economic anthropologists such as Marshall Sahlins,[19] Karl Polanyi,[20] Marcel Mauss[21] and Maurice Godelier[22] have demonstrated that in traditional societies, choices people make regarding production and exchange of goods follow patterns of reciprocity which differ sharply from what the Homo economicus model postulates. Such systems have been termed gift economy rather than market economy. Criticisms of the Homo economicus model put forward from the standpoint of ethics usually refer to this traditional ethic of kinship-based reciprocity that held together traditional societies. Philosophers Amartya Sen and Axel Honneth are noted for their criticisms of the normative assumptions made by the self-interested utility function.[23]

Economists Thorstein Veblen, John Maynard Keynes, Herbert A. Simon, and many of the Austrian School criticise Homo economicus as an actor with too great an understanding of macroeconomics and economic forecasting in his decision making. They stress uncertainty and bounded rationality in the making of economic decisions, rather than relying on the rational man who is fully informed of all circumstances impinging on his decisions. They argue that perfect knowledge never exists, which means that all economic activity implies risk. Austrian economists rather prefer to use as a model tool the Homo agens.

Empirical studies by Amos Tversky questioned the assumption that investors are rational. In 1995, Tversky demonstrated the tendency of investors to make risk-averse choices in gains, and risk-seeking choices in losses. The investors appeared as very risk-averse for small losses but indifferent for a small chance of a very large loss. This violates economic rationality as usually understood. Further research on this subject, showing other deviations from conventionally defined economic rationality, is being done in the growing field of experimental or behavioral economics. Some of the broader issues involved in this criticism are studied in decision theory, of which rational choice theory is only a subset.

Behavioral economists Richard Thaler and Daniel Kahneman have criticized the notion of economic agents possessing stable and well-defined preferences that they consistently act upon in a self-interested manner. Using insights from psychological experiments found explanations for anomalies in economic decision-making that seemed to violate rational choice theory. Writing a column in the Journal of Economic Perspectives under the title Anomalies, Thaler wrote features on the many ways observed economic behavior in markets deviated from theory. One such anomaly was the endowment effect by which individual preferences are framed based on reference positions (Kahneman et al., 1990). In an experiment in which one group was given a mug and the other was asked how much they were willing to pay (WTP) for the mug, it was found that the price that those endowed with the mug where willingness to accept (WTA) greatly exceeded that of the WTP. This was seen as falsifying the Coase theorem in which for every person the WTA equals the WTP that is the basis of the efficient-market hypothesis. From this they argued the endowment effect acts on us by making it painful for us to give up the endowment. Kahneman also argued against the rational-agent model in which agents make decisions with all of the relevant context including weighing all possible future opportunities and risks. Evidence supports the claim that decisions are often made by "narrow framing" with investors making portfolio decisions in isolation from their entire portfolio (Nicholas Barberis et al., 2003). Shlomo Benartzi and Thaler found that investors also tended to use unreasonable time periods in evaluating their investments.[24]

In Kahneman-Tversky’s criticism of the Homo Economicus model, many mainstream economists had utilised deductive logic to further progress the Homo Economicus idea as opposed to Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky in which they had applied inductive logic. Further findings of their experiments that opposed Homo Economicus had found that individuals will constantly adjust their choices according to changes in their income and market prices. Furthermore, Kahneman and Tversky had conducted experiments exploring prospect theory where results from several experiments concluded that individuals will generally put higher importance on avoiding loss over making a gain.[6]

Other critics of the Homo economicus model of humanity, such as Bruno Frey, point to the excessive emphasis on extrinsic motivation (rewards and punishments from the social environment) as opposed to intrinsic motivation. For example, it is difficult if not impossible to understand how Homo economicus would be a hero in war or would get inherent pleasure from craftsmanship. Frey and others argue that too much emphasis on rewards and punishments can "crowd out" (discourage) intrinsic motivation: paying a boy for doing household tasks may push him from doing those tasks "to help the family" to doing them simply for the reward.

Another weakness is highlighted by economic sociologists and anthropologists, who argue that Homo economicus ignores an extremely important question, i.e. the origins of tastes and the parameters of the utility function by social influences, training, education, and the like. The exogeneity of tastes (preferences) in this model is the major distinction from Homo sociologicus, in which tastes are taken as partially or even totally determined by the societal environment (see below).

Further critics[citation needed], learning from the broadly defined psychoanalytic tradition, criticize the Homo economicus model as ignoring the inner conflicts that real-world individuals suffer, as between short-term and long-term goals (e.g., eating chocolate cake and losing weight) or between individual goals and societal values. Such conflicts may lead to "irrational" behavior involving inconsistency, psychological paralysis, neurosis, and psychic pain. Further irrational human behaviour can occur as a result of habit, laziness, mimicry and simple obedience.

The emerging science of "neuroeconomics" suggests that there are serious shortcomings in the conventional theories of economic rationality.[25] Rational economic decision making has been shown to produce high levels of cortisol, epinephrine and corticosteroids, associated with elevated levels of stress. It seems that the dopaminic system is only activated upon achieving the reward, and otherwise the "pain" receptors, particularly in the prefrontal cortex of the left hemisphere of the brain show a high level of activation.[26] Serotonin and oxytocin levels are minimised, and the general immune system shows a level of suppression. Such a pattern is associated with a generalised reduction in the levels of trust. Unsolicited "gift giving", considered irrational from the point of view of Homo economicus, by comparison, shows an elevated stimulation of the pleasure circuits of the whole brain, reduction in the levels of stress, optimal functioning of the immune system, reduction in cortico-steroids and epinephrine and cortisol, activation of the substantia nigra, the striatum and the nucleus accumbens (associated with the placebo effect), all associated with the building of social trust. Mirror neurons result in a win-win positive sum game in which the person giving the gift receives a pleasure equivalent to the person receiving it.[27] This confirms the findings of anthropology which suggest that a "gift economy" preceded the more recent market systems where win-lose or risk-avoidance lose-lose calculations apply.[28]

Responses Edit

Some economists[who?] disagree with these critiques, arguing that it may be relevant to analyze the consequences of enlightened egoism just as it may be worthwhile to consider altruistic or social behavior. Others[who?] argue that we need to understand the consequences of such narrow-minded greed even if only a small percentage of the population embraces such motives. Free riders, for example, would have a major negative impact on the provision of public goods. However, economists' supply and demand predictions might obtain even if only a significant minority of market participants act like Homo economicus. In this view, the assumption of Homo economicus can and should be simply a preliminary step on the road to a more sophisticated model.

Others[who?] argue that Homo economicus is a reasonable approximation for behavior within market institutions, since the individualized nature of human action in such social settings encourages individualistic behavior. Not only do market settings encourage the application of a simple cost-benefit calculus by individuals, but they reward and thus attract the more individualistic people. It can be difficult to apply social values (as opposed to following self-interest) in an extremely competitive market; a company that refuses to pollute, for example, may find itself bankrupt.

Defenders of the Homo economicus model see many critics of the dominant school as using a straw man technique. For example, it is common for critics to argue that real people do not have cost-less access to infinite information and an innate ability to instantly process it[citation needed]. However, in advanced-level theoretical economics, scholars have found ways of addressing these problems, modifying models enough to more realistically depict real-life decision-making. For example, models of individual behavior under bounded rationality and of people suffering from envy can be found in the literature.[29] It is primarily when targeting the limiting assumptions made in constructing undergraduate models that the criticisms listed above are valid. These criticisms are especially valid to the extent that the professor asserts that the simplifying assumptions are true or uses them in a propagandistic way.

Perspectives Edit

According to Sergio Caruso, when talking of Homo economicus, one should distinguish between the purely "methodological" versions, aimed at practical use in the economic sphere (e.g. economic calculus), and the" anthropological" versions, more ambitiously aimed at depicting a certain type of man (supposed to be actually existing), or even human nature in general. The former, traditionally founded on a merely speculative psychology, have proved unrealistic and frankly wrong as descriptive models of economic behaviour (therefore not applicable for normative purposes either); however, they are liable to be corrected resorting to the new empirically based economic psychology, which turns quite other than the philosophers' psychology that economists have used until yesterday. Among the latter (i.e. the anthropological versions), one can make a further distinction between the weak versions, more plausible, and the strong ones, irreparably ideological. Depicting different types of "economic man" (each depending on the social context) is in fact possible with the help of cultural anthropology, and social psychology (a branch of psychology economists have strangely ignored), if only those types are contrived as socially and/or historically determined abstractions (such as Weber's, Korsch's, and Fromm's concepts of Idealtypus, "historical specification", and "social character"). Even a Marxist theoretician such as Gramsci—reminds Caruso—admitted of the Homo economicus as a useful abstraction on the ground of economic theory, provided that we grant there be as many homines oeconomici as the modes of production. On the contrary, when one concept of Homo economicus claims to grasp the eternal essence of what is human, at the same time putting aside all other aspects of human nature (such as Homo faber, Homo loquens, Homo ludens, Homo reciprocans, and so on), then the concept leaves the field of good philosophy, not to speak of social science, and is ready to enter a political doctrine as the most dangerous of its ideological ingredients.[30][page needed]

Homo sociologicus Edit

Comparisons between economics and sociology have resulted in a corresponding term Homo sociologicus (introduced by German sociologist Ralf Dahrendorf in 1958), to parody the image of human nature given in some sociological models that attempt to limit the social forces that determine individual tastes and social values.[31] (The alternative or additional source of these would be biology.) Hirsch et al. say that Homo sociologicus is largely a tabula rasa upon which societies and cultures write values and goals; unlike economicus, sociologicus acts not to pursue selfish interests but to fulfill social roles[32] (though the fulfillment of social roles may have a selfish rationale—e.g. politicians or socialites). This "individual" may appear to be all society and no individual.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Zak, Paul J. (2010-12-16). Moral Markets: The Critical Role of Values in the Economy. Princeton University Press. p. 158. ISBN 9781400837366. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  2. ^ Rittenberg and Tregarthen. "Chapter 6" (PDF). Principles of Microeconomics. p. 2. Retrieved June 20, 2012.
  3. ^ a b Persky, Joseph. "Retrospectives: The Ethology of Homo economicus." The Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 9, No. 2 (Spring, 1995), pp. 221–231
  4. ^ Mill, John Stuart. "On the Definition of Political Economy, and on the Method of Investigation Proper to It," London and Westminster Review, October 1836. Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy, 2nd ed. London: Longmans, Green, Reader & Dyer, 1874, essay 5, paragraphs 38 and 48.
  5. ^ Smith, Adam. “On the Division of Labour,” The Wealth of Nations, Books I–III. New York: Penguin Classics, 1986, p. 119.
  6. ^ a b c Elahi, Khandakar (January 2014). "Behavioural controversy concerning homo economicus: a Humean perspective". The Journal of Philosophical Economics. 7: 2–29.
  7. ^ Kluver, Jesse; Frazier, Rebecca; Haidt, Jonathan (2014). "Behavioral ethics for Homo economicus, Homo heuristicus, and Homo duplex". Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes. 123 (2): 150–158. doi:10.1016/j.obhdp.2013.12.004.
  8. ^ Konow, James; Earley, Joseph (2008). "The Hedonistic Paradox: Is homo economicus happier?" (PDF). Journal of Public Economics. 92 (1–2): 1–33. doi:10.1016/j.jpubeco.2007.04.006.
  9. ^ Druzic, M. (2012). MODEL HOMO ECONOMICUSA I KONCEPT ULTIMATIVNO POZELJNOGA. Ekonomska Misao i Praksa, 21(2), 459.
  10. ^ Kluver, J., Frazier, R., & Haidt, J. (2014). Behavioral ethics for Homo economicus, Homo heuristicus, and Homo duplex. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 123(2), 150–158. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.obhdp.2013.12.004
  11. ^ Medema, Steven G. (2019). The Economics Book: From Xenophon to Cryptocurrency, 250 Milestones in the History of Economics. New York: Sterling Publishing. p. 146. ISBN 978-1-4549-3008-2.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  12. ^ Pareto, Vilfredo (1906). "Manual of political economy".
  13. ^ Zabieglik, Stefan (2002). "The Origins of the Term Homo Oeconomicus", Gdansk, 123–130.
  14. ^ "Homo oeconomicus". Oxford English Dictionary.
  15. ^ This is from the CD edition of 2002.
  16. ^ AK Sen, ‘Rational Fools: A Critique of the Behavioural Foundations of Economic Theory’ (1977) 6 Philosophy and Public Affairs 317, 332
  17. ^ Falk, A. (2003). Homo Economicus versus Homo Reciprocans: Studies on a New Social Political Model of Change? Perspektiven der Wirtschaftspolitik : PWP : eine Zeitschrift des Vereins für Socialpolitik, 4(1), 141–172.
  18. ^ Urbina, D. A., & Ruiz-Villaverde, A. (2019). A Critical Review of Homo Economicus from Five Approaches. The American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 78(1), 63–93. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajes.12258
  19. ^ Marshall Sahlins: The Original Affluent Society 2019-07-24 at the Wayback Machine, in: Marshall Sahlins (1972): Stone Age Economics. London: Routledge 2003
  20. ^ Karl Polanyi (1944): The Great Transformation. Beacon Press 2001
  21. ^ Marcel Mauss (1924): The Gift. The Form and Reason for Exchange in Archaic Societies. London: Routledge 2006
  22. ^ Maurice Godelier: The Enigma of the Gift. University Of Chicago Press 1999
  23. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Social Freedom, Morality and Markets | Axel Honneth (2016)". YouTube.
  24. ^ Benartzi, Shlomo; Thaler, Richard H. (1995). "Myopic Loss Aversion and the Equity Premium Puzzle" (PDF). The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 110 (1): 73–92. doi:10.2307/2118511. JSTOR 2118511. S2CID 55030273.
  25. ^ Schmitz, Sigrid; Köeszegi, Sabine T.; Enzenhofer, Bettina; Harrer, Christine (2015). "Quo vadis Homo economicus? References to rationality/emotionality in neuroeconomic discourses". Recent Notes on Labor Science and Organization. University of Vienna (Universität Wien). 2015, 2. Pdf.
  26. ^ Rilling, J.K.; Sanfey, A.G.; Aronson, J.A.; Nystrom, L.E.; Cohen, J.D. (2004). "Opposing BOLD responses to reciprocated and unreciprocated altruism in putative reward pathways". NeuroReport. 15 (16): 2539–2543. doi:10.1097/00001756-200411150-00022. PMID 15538191. S2CID 13127406.
  27. ^ Kosfeld, M.; Heinrichs, M; Zak, P.J.; Fischbacher, U.; Fehr, E. (2005). "Oxytocin increases trust in humans". Nature. 435 (7042): 673–676. Bibcode:2005Natur.435..673K. doi:10.1038/nature03701. PMID 15931222. S2CID 1234727.
  28. ^ Bowles, Samuel and Herbert Gintis "A Cooperative Species: Human Reciprocity and its Evolution" (Princeton University Press; Reprint edition)
  29. ^ Geoffrey Brennan: "Pareto Desirable Redistribution: The case of Malice and Envy" in: Culture, Social Norms and Economics (1997)
  30. ^ Caruso, Sergio: Homo oeconomicus. Paradigma, critiche, revisioni, Florence (Italy): Firenze University Press, 2012 ISBN 978-88-6655-105-8
  31. ^ Dahrendorf, Ralf (1965). Homo Sociologicus: ein Versuch zur Geschichte, Bedeutung und Kritik der Kategorie der sozialen Rolle. Köln/Opladen: Westdeutscher Verlag.
  32. ^ Hirsch, Paul, Stuart Michaels and Ray Friedman. 1990. "Clean Models vs. Dirty Hands: Why Economics Is Different from Sociology." In Sharon Zukin and Paul DiMaggio, eds. Structures of Capital: The Social Organization of the Economy: 39–56. Cambridge; New York and Melbourne: Cambridge University Press, 1990 (ISBN 0-521-37523-1)

References Edit

  • J.S. Mill, 'On the Definition of Political Economy, and on the Method of Investigation Proper to It' (1836) London and Westminster Review
  • J.S. Mill, Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy (2nd ed. Longmans, Green, Reader & Dyer 1874) (read online)
  • A.K. Sen, ‘Rational Fools: A Critique of the Behavioural Foundations of Economic Theory’ (1977) 6 Philosophy and Public Affairs 317

External links Edit

  • (DOC) by Dr. Mohammad Omar Farooq
  • Requiem for Homo Economicus Edward J. O'Boyle, Mayo Research Institute, a refutation of reductionism in free will using tenets of natural law

homo, economicus, this, article, about, economic, concept, journal, homo, oeconomicus, term, economic, portrayal, humans, agents, consistently, rational, narrowly, self, interested, pursue, their, subjectively, defined, ends, optimally, word, play, homo, sapie. This article is about the economic concept For the journal see Homo Oeconomicus The term Homo economicus or economic man is the portrayal of humans as agents who are consistently rational and narrowly self interested and who pursue their subjectively defined ends optimally It is a word play on Homo sapiens used in some economic theories and in pedagogy 1 In game theory Homo economicus is often modelled through the assumption of perfect rationality It assumes that agents always act in a way that maximize utility as a consumer and profit as a producer 2 and are capable of arbitrarily complex deductions towards that end They will always be capable of thinking through all possible outcomes and choosing that course of action which will result in the best possible result The rationality implied in Homo economicus does not restrict what sort of preferences are admissible Only naive applications of the Homo economicus model assume that agents know what is best for their long term physical and mental health For example an agent s utility function could be linked to the perceived utility of other agents such as one s husband or children making Homo economicus compatible with other models such as Homo reciprocans which emphasizes human cooperation As a theory on human conduct it contrasts to the concepts of behavioral economics which examines cognitive biases and other irrationalities and to bounded rationality which assumes that practical elements such as cognitive and time limitations restrict the rationality of agents Contents 1 History of the term 2 Model 3 Criticisms 4 Responses 5 Perspectives 6 Homo sociologicus 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksHistory of the term EditThe term economic man was used for the first time in the late nineteenth century by critics of John Stuart Mill s work on political economy 3 Below is a passage from Mill s work that critics referred to Political economy does not treat the whole of man s nature as modified by the social state nor of the whole conduct of man in society It is concerned with him solely as a being who desires to possess wealth and who is capable of judging the comparative efficacy of means for obtaining that end 4 Later in the same work Mill stated that he was proposing an arbitrary definition of man as a being who inevitably does that by which he may obtain the greatest amount of necessaries conveniences and luxuries with the smallest quantity of labour and physical self denial with which they can be obtained Adam Smith in The Theory of Moral Sentiments had claimed that individuals have sympathy for the well being of others On the other hand in The Wealth of Nations Smith wrote It is not from the benevolence of the butcher the brewer or the baker that we expect our dinner but from their regard to their own interest 5 This comment is perfectly in line with the notion of Homo economicus and the idea propounded by Smith in The Wealth of Nations and in the 20th century by the likes of Ayn Rand in The Virtue of Selfishness for example that pursuing narrow individual self interest promotes social well being In Book V Chapter I Smith argues The man whose whole life is spent in performing a few simple operations of which the effects are perhaps always the same or very nearly the same has no occasion to exert his understanding or to exercise his invention in finding out expedients for removing difficulties which never occur He naturally loses therefore the habit of such exertion and generally becomes as stupid and ignorant as it is possible for a human creature to become This could be seen as prefiguring one part of Marx s theory of alienation of labor and also as a pro worker argument against the division of labor and the restrictions it places upon freedom of occupation But even so taken in the context of the work as a whole Smith clearly intends it in a pro capitalism pro bourgeoisie way removing difficulties such as reducing the time needed for travel and trade through expedients such as steam engine ships here means the typical argument that capitalism brings freedom of entrepreneurship and innovation which then bring prosperity Thus Smith is not unreasonably called The Father of Capitalism early on he theorized many of today s most widespread and deep seated pro capitalism arguments The early role of Homo Economicus within neoclassical theory was summarised to include a general objective of discovering laws and principles to accelerate further growth within the national economy and the welfare of ordinary citizens These laws and principles were determined by two governing factors natural and social 6 It had been found to be the foundation of neoclassical theory of the firm which assumed that individual agents would act rationally amongst other rational individuals 7 In which Adam Smith explains that the actions of those that are rational and self interested under homo economicus promotes the general good overall which was understood as the efficient allocation of material wealth However social scientists had doubted the actual importance of income and wealth to overall happiness in societies 8 The term had initially been used to criticise the nature of the economic agent that Smith and Mill had illustrated heavily in their writings It had been stated that from an analytical perspective Mill s contribution to the development of Homo Economicus was one of great importance where he was able to define the political economy with differing aspects of production and the distribution of wealth However Adam Smith had been the first to demonstrate that under appropriate policies and an economic system that national prosperity could occur due to the selfishness of individuals 6 Economists in the late 19th century such as Francis Edgeworth William Stanley Jevons Leon Walras and Vilfredo Pareto built mathematical models on these economic assumptions In the 20th century the rational choice theory of Lionel Robbins came to dominate mainstream economics The term economic man then took on a more specific meaning a person who acted rationally on complete knowledge out of self interest and the desire for wealth Model EditHomo economicus is a term used for an approximation or model of Homo sapiens that acts to obtain the highest possible well being for themself given available information about opportunities and other constraints both natural and institutional on their ability to achieve their predetermined goals This approach has been formalized in certain social sciences models particularly in economics The model of the homo economicus is currently the most widespread model of human behaviour in economics There are still limitations in developing this model through the years of social development 9 Human nature is complex and full of contradictions People can do deeds that are full of justice or they can do deeds that are annoying In the vast majority of cases people are selfish and unselfish depending on various natures The Homo economicus model is usually based on pure self interest in order to activate cooperation and thus contribute to society Within economic social systems humans are usually rational and selfish maximising personal preferences and this form of model is also known as Homo economicus within the homo economicus model the principle of rationality and selfishness is well chosen Given the same conditions people only want to get more not less This is why managers can increase productivity through incentive policies 10 Homo economicus is usually seen as rational in the sense that well being as defined by the utility function is optimized given perceived opportunities 11 That is the individual seeks to attain very specific and predetermined goals to the greatest extent with the least possible cost Note that this kind of rationality does not say that the individual s actual goals are rational in some larger ethical social or human sense only that they try to attain them at minimal cost Only naive applications of the Homo economicus model assume that this hypothetical individual knows what is best for their long term physical and mental health and can be relied upon to always make the right decision for themself See rational choice theory and rational expectations for further discussion the article on rationality widens the discussion As in social science these assumptions are at best approximations The term is often used derogatorily in academic literature perhaps most commonly by sociologists many of whom tend to prefer structural explanations to ones based on rational action by individuals The use of the Latin form Homo economicus is certainly long established Persky 3 traces it back to Pareto 1906 12 but notes that it may be older The English term economic man can be found even earlier in John Kells Ingram s A History of Political Economy 1888 13 The Oxford English Dictionary O E D cites the use of Homo oeconomicus by C S Devas in his 1883 work The Groundwork of Economics in reference to Mill s writings as one of a number of phrases that imitate the scientific name for the human species Mill has only examined the Homo oeconomicus or dollar hunting animal 14 According to the OED the human genus name Homo is Used with L or mock L adjs in names imitating Homo sapiens etc and intended to personify some aspect of human life or behaviour indicated by the adj Homo faber feIb r H Bergson L Evolution Creatrice 1907 ii 151 a term used to designate man as a maker of tools Variants are often comic Homo insipiens Homo turisticus 15 Note that such forms should logically keep the capital for the genus name i e Homo economicus rather than homo economicus Actual usage is inconsistent Amartya Sen has argued there are grave pitfalls in assuming that rationality is limited to selfish rationality Economics should build into its assumptions the notion that people can give credible commitments to a course of conduct He demonstrates the absurdity with the narrowness of the assumptions by some economists with the following example of two strangers meeting on a street 16 Where is the railway station he asks me There I say pointing at the post office and would you please post this letter for me on the way Yes he says determined to open the envelope and check whether it contains something valuable Criticisms EditThis article s Criticism or Controversy section may compromise the article s neutrality by separating out potentially negative information Please integrate the section s contents into the article as a whole or rewrite the material June 2021 Homo economicus bases its choices on a consideration of its own personal utility function In recent times few concepts have been as recognisable and accepted as the concept of the homo economicus The system established by this concept has therefore almost become the basis for the concepts currently used in economics As society develops and the modern economy evolves will people follow the concept of the homo economicus 17 Self interest is the main motivation of human beings in their transactions is a theoretical structure in the concept of homo economicus Over the years economists have studied and discussed institutional economics behavioural economics political economy economic anthropology and ecological economics The economic man solution is considered to be inadequate and flawed 18 Consequently the Homo economicus assumptions have been criticized not only by economists on the basis of logical arguments but also on empirical grounds by cross cultural comparison Economic anthropologists such as Marshall Sahlins 19 Karl Polanyi 20 Marcel Mauss 21 and Maurice Godelier 22 have demonstrated that in traditional societies choices people make regarding production and exchange of goods follow patterns of reciprocity which differ sharply from what the Homo economicus model postulates Such systems have been termed gift economy rather than market economy Criticisms of the Homo economicus model put forward from the standpoint of ethics usually refer to this traditional ethic of kinship based reciprocity that held together traditional societies Philosophers Amartya Sen and Axel Honneth are noted for their criticisms of the normative assumptions made by the self interested utility function 23 Economists Thorstein Veblen John Maynard Keynes Herbert A Simon and many of the Austrian School criticise Homo economicus as an actor with too great an understanding of macroeconomics and economic forecasting in his decision making They stress uncertainty and bounded rationality in the making of economic decisions rather than relying on the rational man who is fully informed of all circumstances impinging on his decisions They argue that perfect knowledge never exists which means that all economic activity implies risk Austrian economists rather prefer to use as a model tool the Homo agens Empirical studies by Amos Tversky questioned the assumption that investors are rational In 1995 Tversky demonstrated the tendency of investors to make risk averse choices in gains and risk seeking choices in losses The investors appeared as very risk averse for small losses but indifferent for a small chance of a very large loss This violates economic rationality as usually understood Further research on this subject showing other deviations from conventionally defined economic rationality is being done in the growing field of experimental or behavioral economics Some of the broader issues involved in this criticism are studied in decision theory of which rational choice theory is only a subset Behavioral economists Richard Thaler and Daniel Kahneman have criticized the notion of economic agents possessing stable and well defined preferences that they consistently act upon in a self interested manner Using insights from psychological experiments found explanations for anomalies in economic decision making that seemed to violate rational choice theory Writing a column in the Journal of Economic Perspectives under the title Anomalies Thaler wrote features on the many ways observed economic behavior in markets deviated from theory One such anomaly was the endowment effect by which individual preferences are framed based on reference positions Kahneman et al 1990 In an experiment in which one group was given a mug and the other was asked how much they were willing to pay WTP for the mug it was found that the price that those endowed with the mug where willingness to accept WTA greatly exceeded that of the WTP This was seen as falsifying the Coase theorem in which for every person the WTA equals the WTP that is the basis of the efficient market hypothesis From this they argued the endowment effect acts on us by making it painful for us to give up the endowment Kahneman also argued against the rational agent model in which agents make decisions with all of the relevant context including weighing all possible future opportunities and risks Evidence supports the claim that decisions are often made by narrow framing with investors making portfolio decisions in isolation from their entire portfolio Nicholas Barberis et al 2003 Shlomo Benartzi and Thaler found that investors also tended to use unreasonable time periods in evaluating their investments 24 In Kahneman Tversky s criticism of the Homo Economicus model many mainstream economists had utilised deductive logic to further progress the Homo Economicus idea as opposed to Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky in which they had applied inductive logic Further findings of their experiments that opposed Homo Economicus had found that individuals will constantly adjust their choices according to changes in their income and market prices Furthermore Kahneman and Tversky had conducted experiments exploring prospect theory where results from several experiments concluded that individuals will generally put higher importance on avoiding loss over making a gain 6 Other critics of the Homo economicus model of humanity such as Bruno Frey point to the excessive emphasis on extrinsic motivation rewards and punishments from the social environment as opposed to intrinsic motivation For example it is difficult if not impossible to understand how Homo economicus would be a hero in war or would get inherent pleasure from craftsmanship Frey and others argue that too much emphasis on rewards and punishments can crowd out discourage intrinsic motivation paying a boy for doing household tasks may push him from doing those tasks to help the family to doing them simply for the reward Another weakness is highlighted by economic sociologists and anthropologists who argue that Homo economicus ignores an extremely important question i e the origins of tastes and the parameters of the utility function by social influences training education and the like The exogeneity of tastes preferences in this model is the major distinction from Homo sociologicus in which tastes are taken as partially or even totally determined by the societal environment see below Further critics citation needed learning from the broadly defined psychoanalytic tradition criticize the Homo economicus model as ignoring the inner conflicts that real world individuals suffer as between short term and long term goals e g eating chocolate cake and losing weight or between individual goals and societal values Such conflicts may lead to irrational behavior involving inconsistency psychological paralysis neurosis and psychic pain Further irrational human behaviour can occur as a result of habit laziness mimicry and simple obedience The emerging science of neuroeconomics suggests that there are serious shortcomings in the conventional theories of economic rationality 25 Rational economic decision making has been shown to produce high levels of cortisol epinephrine and corticosteroids associated with elevated levels of stress It seems that the dopaminic system is only activated upon achieving the reward and otherwise the pain receptors particularly in the prefrontal cortex of the left hemisphere of the brain show a high level of activation 26 Serotonin and oxytocin levels are minimised and the general immune system shows a level of suppression Such a pattern is associated with a generalised reduction in the levels of trust Unsolicited gift giving considered irrational from the point of view of Homo economicus by comparison shows an elevated stimulation of the pleasure circuits of the whole brain reduction in the levels of stress optimal functioning of the immune system reduction in cortico steroids and epinephrine and cortisol activation of the substantia nigra the striatum and the nucleus accumbens associated with the placebo effect all associated with the building of social trust Mirror neurons result in a win win positive sum game in which the person giving the gift receives a pleasure equivalent to the person receiving it 27 This confirms the findings of anthropology which suggest that a gift economy preceded the more recent market systems where win lose or risk avoidance lose lose calculations apply 28 Responses EditThis section may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions October 2023 Some economists who disagree with these critiques arguing that it may be relevant to analyze the consequences of enlightened egoism just as it may be worthwhile to consider altruistic or social behavior Others who argue that we need to understand the consequences of such narrow minded greed even if only a small percentage of the population embraces such motives Free riders for example would have a major negative impact on the provision of public goods However economists supply and demand predictions might obtain even if only a significant minority of market participants act like Homo economicus In this view the assumption of Homo economicus can and should be simply a preliminary step on the road to a more sophisticated model Others who argue that Homo economicus is a reasonable approximation for behavior within market institutions since the individualized nature of human action in such social settings encourages individualistic behavior Not only do market settings encourage the application of a simple cost benefit calculus by individuals but they reward and thus attract the more individualistic people It can be difficult to apply social values as opposed to following self interest in an extremely competitive market a company that refuses to pollute for example may find itself bankrupt Defenders of the Homo economicus model see many critics of the dominant school as using a straw man technique For example it is common for critics to argue that real people do not have cost less access to infinite information and an innate ability to instantly process it citation needed However in advanced level theoretical economics scholars have found ways of addressing these problems modifying models enough to more realistically depict real life decision making For example models of individual behavior under bounded rationality and of people suffering from envy can be found in the literature 29 It is primarily when targeting the limiting assumptions made in constructing undergraduate models that the criticisms listed above are valid These criticisms are especially valid to the extent that the professor asserts that the simplifying assumptions are true or uses them in a propagandistic way Perspectives EditAccording to Sergio Caruso when talking of Homo economicus one should distinguish between the purely methodological versions aimed at practical use in the economic sphere e g economic calculus and the anthropological versions more ambitiously aimed at depicting a certain type of man supposed to be actually existing or even human nature in general The former traditionally founded on a merely speculative psychology have proved unrealistic and frankly wrong as descriptive models of economic behaviour therefore not applicable for normative purposes either however they are liable to be corrected resorting to the new empirically based economic psychology which turns quite other than the philosophers psychology that economists have used until yesterday Among the latter i e the anthropological versions one can make a further distinction between the weak versions more plausible and the strong ones irreparably ideological Depicting different types of economic man each depending on the social context is in fact possible with the help of cultural anthropology and social psychology a branch of psychology economists have strangely ignored if only those types are contrived as socially and or historically determined abstractions such as Weber s Korsch s and Fromm s concepts of Idealtypus historical specification and social character Even a Marxist theoretician such as Gramsci reminds Caruso admitted of the Homo economicus as a useful abstraction on the ground of economic theory provided that we grant there be as many homines oeconomici as the modes of production On the contrary when one concept of Homo economicus claims to grasp the eternal essence of what is human at the same time putting aside all other aspects of human nature such as Homo faber Homo loquens Homo ludens Homo reciprocans and so on then the concept leaves the field of good philosophy not to speak of social science and is ready to enter a political doctrine as the most dangerous of its ideological ingredients 30 page needed Homo sociologicus EditComparisons between economics and sociology have resulted in a corresponding term Homo sociologicus introduced by German sociologist Ralf Dahrendorf in 1958 to parody the image of human nature given in some sociological models that attempt to limit the social forces that determine individual tastes and social values 31 The alternative or additional source of these would be biology Hirsch et al say that Homo sociologicus is largely a tabula rasa upon which societies and cultures write values and goals unlike economicus sociologicus acts not to pursue selfish interests but to fulfill social roles 32 though the fulfillment of social roles may have a selfish rationale e g politicians or socialites This individual may appear to be all society and no individual See also EditAgent economics Consumer confusion Homo duplex Homo Sovieticus Post autistic economics Rational agent Rational choice theory Rational pricing Superrationality Bounded rationality Rationality and power List of alternative names for the human speciesNotes Edit Zak Paul J 2010 12 16 Moral Markets The Critical Role of Values in the Economy Princeton University Press p 158 ISBN 9781400837366 Retrieved 22 June 2018 Rittenberg and Tregarthen Chapter 6 PDF Principles of Microeconomics p 2 Retrieved June 20 2012 a b Persky Joseph Retrospectives The Ethology of Homo economicus The Journal of Economic Perspectives Vol 9 No 2 Spring 1995 pp 221 231 Mill John Stuart On the Definition of Political Economy and on the Method of Investigation Proper to It London and Westminster Review October 1836 Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy 2nd ed London Longmans Green Reader amp Dyer 1874 essay 5 paragraphs 38 and 48 Smith Adam On the Division of Labour The Wealth of Nations Books I III New York Penguin Classics 1986 p 119 a b c Elahi Khandakar January 2014 Behavioural controversy concerning homo economicus a Humean perspective The Journal of Philosophical Economics 7 2 29 Kluver Jesse Frazier Rebecca Haidt Jonathan 2014 Behavioral ethics for Homo economicus Homo heuristicus and Homo duplex Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 123 2 150 158 doi 10 1016 j obhdp 2013 12 004 Konow James Earley Joseph 2008 The Hedonistic Paradox Is homo economicus happier PDF Journal of Public Economics 92 1 2 1 33 doi 10 1016 j jpubeco 2007 04 006 Druzic M 2012 MODEL HOMO ECONOMICUSA I KONCEPT ULTIMATIVNO POZELJNOGA Ekonomska Misao i Praksa 21 2 459 Kluver J Frazier R amp Haidt J 2014 Behavioral ethics for Homo economicus Homo heuristicus and Homo duplex Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes 123 2 150 158 https doi org 10 1016 j obhdp 2013 12 004 Medema Steven G 2019 The Economics Book From Xenophon to Cryptocurrency 250 Milestones in the History of Economics New York Sterling Publishing p 146 ISBN 978 1 4549 3008 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Pareto Vilfredo 1906 Manual of political economy Zabieglik Stefan 2002 The Origins of the Term Homo Oeconomicus Gdansk 123 130 Homo oeconomicus Oxford English Dictionary This is from the CD edition of 2002 AK Sen Rational Fools A Critique of the Behavioural Foundations of Economic Theory 1977 6 Philosophy and Public Affairs 317 332 Falk A 2003 Homo Economicus versus Homo Reciprocans Studies on a New Social Political Model of Change Perspektiven der Wirtschaftspolitik PWP eine Zeitschrift des Vereins fur Socialpolitik 4 1 141 172 Urbina D A amp Ruiz Villaverde A 2019 A Critical Review of Homo Economicus from Five Approaches The American Journal of Economics and Sociology 78 1 63 93 https doi org 10 1111 ajes 12258 Marshall Sahlins The Original Affluent Society Archived 2019 07 24 at the Wayback Machine in Marshall Sahlins 1972 Stone Age Economics London Routledge 2003 Karl Polanyi 1944 The Great Transformation Beacon Press 2001 Marcel Mauss 1924 The Gift The Form and Reason for Exchange in Archaic Societies London Routledge 2006 Maurice Godelier The Enigma of the Gift University Of Chicago Press 1999 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Social Freedom Morality and Markets Axel Honneth 2016 YouTube Benartzi Shlomo Thaler Richard H 1995 Myopic Loss Aversion and the Equity Premium Puzzle PDF The Quarterly Journal of Economics 110 1 73 92 doi 10 2307 2118511 JSTOR 2118511 S2CID 55030273 Schmitz Sigrid Koeszegi Sabine T Enzenhofer Bettina Harrer Christine 2015 Quo vadis Homo economicus References to rationality emotionality in neuroeconomic discourses Recent Notes on Labor Science and Organization University of Vienna Universitat Wien 2015 2 Pdf Rilling J K Sanfey A G Aronson J A Nystrom L E Cohen J D 2004 Opposing BOLD responses to reciprocated and unreciprocated altruism in putative reward pathways NeuroReport 15 16 2539 2543 doi 10 1097 00001756 200411150 00022 PMID 15538191 S2CID 13127406 Kosfeld M Heinrichs M Zak P J Fischbacher U Fehr E 2005 Oxytocin increases trust in humans Nature 435 7042 673 676 Bibcode 2005Natur 435 673K doi 10 1038 nature03701 PMID 15931222 S2CID 1234727 Bowles Samuel and Herbert Gintis A Cooperative Species Human Reciprocity and its Evolution Princeton University Press Reprint edition Geoffrey Brennan Pareto Desirable Redistribution The case of Malice and Envy in Culture Social Norms and Economics 1997 Caruso Sergio Homo oeconomicus Paradigma critiche revisioni Florence Italy Firenze University Press 2012 ISBN 978 88 6655 105 8 Dahrendorf Ralf 1965 Homo Sociologicus ein Versuch zur Geschichte Bedeutung und Kritik der Kategorie der sozialen Rolle Koln Opladen Westdeutscher Verlag Hirsch Paul Stuart Michaels and Ray Friedman 1990 Clean Models vs Dirty Hands Why Economics Is Different from Sociology In Sharon Zukin and Paul DiMaggio eds Structures of Capital The Social Organization of the Economy 39 56 Cambridge New York and Melbourne Cambridge University Press 1990 ISBN 0 521 37523 1 References EditJ S Mill On the Definition of Political Economy and on the Method of Investigation Proper to It 1836 London and Westminster Review J S Mill Essays on Some Unsettled Questions of Political Economy 2nd ed Longmans Green Reader amp Dyer 1874 read online A K Sen Rational Fools A Critique of the Behavioural Foundations of Economic Theory 1977 6 Philosophy and Public Affairs 317External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Homo economicus Self Interest Homo Islamicus and Some Behavioral Assumptions in Islamic Economics and Finance DOC by Dr Mohammad Omar Farooq Requiem for Homo Economicus Edward J O Boyle Mayo Research Institute a refutation of reductionism in free will using tenets of natural law Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Homo economicus amp oldid 1178782249, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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