Economists understand little about the causes of growth
The first in a series of columns on the profession’s shortcomings

OVER the past decade economists have been intensely scrutinised for their intellectual failings in the run-up to the 2007-08 financial crisis. Yet had the recession that followed been more severe—wiping a quarter off the GDP of every advanced economy, say—those countries would still have ended up four times as rich per person, in purchasing-power terms, as developing countries are now, and more than ten times as rich as sub-Saharan ones. Robert Lucas, a Nobel prizewinning economist, once wrote that after you have started to think about the gap between poor and rich countries it is hard to think about anything else. Economists understand even less about economic growth than about business cycles. But the profession has done too little to address this failure or to understand its implications.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Root and branch”
Finance & economics April 14th 2018
- The proxy-voting season kicks off on Wall Street
- The outlook for US government debt
- Catching the bitcoin bug
- American sanctions, and fears over Syria, roil Russian markets
- Deutsche Bank gets a new chief executive
- How developing countries weave social safety nets
- Indian states squabble over how to share out federal cash
- America’s gripes with China make a deal hard to imagine
Discover more

Could war in the Gulf push oil to $100 a barrel?
Missiles are flying over a region that supplies a third of the world’s crude

How bond investors soured on France
They now regard the euro zone’s second-largest economy as riskier than Spain

Can Andrea Orcel, Europe’s star banker, create a super-bank?
An interview with the boss of UniCredit
Why economic warfare nearly always misses its target
There is no such thing as a strategic commodity
A tonne of public debt is never made public
New research suggests governments routinely hide their borrowing
Xi Jinping’s belated stimulus has reset the mood in Chinese markets
But can the buying frenzy last?