This
paper examines the relation between some
prevailing neoliberal ideas on the nexus
between openness and inequality issues
and mainstream economic theory, more specifically,
neoclassical economics. It examines three
neoliberal propositions regarding economic
openness and inequality that are commonplace
in multilateral financial organizations,
the business community, and even in the
academia which claim that free trade and
capital account liberalization should,
on one hand, help the poor and decrease
inequality in developing countries, and
on the other hand these policy reforms
should reduce inequality between developing
and developed countries by fostering income
per capita convergence. These propositions
are argued to be fallacies in the sense
of their being a non sequitur of mainstream
neoclassical economics, some being based
on wrong simplifications and generalizations
of empirically contentious textbook models
while others stem from basic confusion
between static theory results and dynamic
theory problems. Given the weak theoretical
foundations of these fallacies, it is
then argued that their persistent popularity
in mainstream academia deserves an explanation.
October 29, 2006.
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