Sunday, 6 October 2013

TAKEN TO THE WOODSHED

The distinguished Berkeley economist and active blogger Brad De Long took me to task on his blog two days ago.   [I actually have De Long's blog bookmarked, but I discovered this while idly Googling myself at 5:30 this morning.]  Here is the beginning of his entry:

"Robert Paul Wolff on Paul Samuelson on Karl Marx: Thursday Whiskey-Tango-Foxtrot-Bang-Query-Bang-Query Weblogging

Robert Paul Wolff:
Eventually, it became possible for the shallow and vulgar technicians of the neoclassical synthesis to dismiss Marx entirely as an economist, trivialising him, in Paul Samuelson’s famous jibe, as a “minor post-Ricardian” and an “autodidact.”
Anybody think that Robert Paul Wolff actually read Paul Samuelson's AEA Presidential Address, and set out to fairly summarize its view of Marx to his readers? Anybody? Anybody? Bueller?"

I think I get the Whiskey-Tango-Foxtrot part [that, I assume, is a clever way of writing WTF, which, for those of you even more clueless than I, is modern shorthand for "what the fuck."]  But maybe somebody can help me out with Bang-Query-Bang-Query.

First things first.  De Long is dead right.  I had never  read the AEA address from which my quote came until this morning -- De Long reproduces it, or at least a lengthy segment of it, right after the above.  Indeed, the only extended thing I have ever read by Samuelson is his famous textbook, and that in whichever edition was current in 1954 when I was a traveling student in Oxford, England.  So, full points to De Long.  I promise not to snark at any more neo-classical icons without first checking my sources.

By the way, I did not start the snarking.  Here is Samuelson, near the end of the segment of the speech reproduced by De Long:  "So far I have been talking about Marx as an economist. And I have been doing my best, subject to truth, to find some merit in him. (You may recall Emerson's neighbor in Concord: when he died the minister tried to find something to say at the funeral eulogy and ended up with, "Well, he was good at laying fires.")"

Let him who is without sin, and all that.

De Long concludes his brief roasting of me with these words: 

"I find it ironic that everything RPW wrote about Marx's economics was anticipatorily refuted by Samuelson in the sentence:
he did not labor over a labor theory of value in order to give us moderns scope to use matrix theory on the "transformation" problem."
Well, that does not come close to representing accurately what I have to say about Marx, but I am not in the same league with Samuelson, so I cannot expect De Long to do due diligence on me in the way I should have done on Samuelson.

De Long's Wikipedia entry describes him as a neo-liberal, and lists Milton Friedman among others as influences on him.  I ought not to be too surprised that he casts a basilisk eye on Marx.

I am delighted and rather surprised that De Long said anything at all about what I have written on Marx [and why now, for heaven's sake?].  As they say in show business, so long as he spelled my name right.