Thrawn: Although I still have difficulty in understanding the utility of the Austrian school of economic theory. If it can't be used with any degree of accuracy in predicting economic change fixed in time, what's the point.
An example, "The soviet union will fall because of these and these factors.". Fine, but before it falls there may be alot of time to aquire wealth.
True - you cannot use Austrian economic theory to make accurate predictions even about a free market. What's more, austrian economic theory states that it is not a deficiency of any theory but a property of the reality and that no theory whatsoever could make more accurate predictions. Kind of the quantum principle in physics.
Human preferences change and if we could predict how, it would mean that humans do not have free will but are just automathons.
Another, "The US economy will fall, eventually, if these factors do not change.". Without fixing the prediction time, where in do I get the benefit. Should I spend resources hedging against the fall, even though it might not happen within my life time?
The theory helps you interpret the facts, which will help you to select which facts to concentrate on. You can be quite accurate in some cases.
We do know that in 2013 the Social Security will run deficits. We do not know what will happen exactly - tax raise, inflation increase, default on obligations or a combination of those but we can be sure it will be a serious change to the existing trends.
I find it doublely frustrating because the Austrian school seems to make so much sense to me. It seems practicle, intuitively sound to me, and can seem to withstand all the refutations brought against it.
That's a price we humans have to pay for having free will. Austrian theory can explain how market may react to any event. Even more specifically it can state how market may not react. It is quite usefull sometimes. Like if your politician is trying to make affordable housing more accesible to the poor by fixing rents, you can confidently predict that everything else being equal you will have less affordable housing for the poor and what is there, will be underutilised.
Also, it is hard to predict things even with good understanding of the markets because so many things depend on arbitrary intervention. No knowlege of the market will help you predict what the federal reserve or congress or chinese government will do next year with regard to exchange rates, interest, tariffs, etc.
You can suggest to them the best way to act in order to achieve some goal. You can tell them what is likely to happen or will not happen in responce to some act. But you sure cannot predict what they will do.
You could have confidently predict that Soviet Union will decline in wealth. But you could never have predicted that it woulr invade Afghanistan or appoint Gorbachev. At some point it's up to a choice of one or a few individuals. And no theory can predict what that individual will think.
But perhaps it is better than other schools because at least it recognises it own limitations?
Or that is recognises the limitation of human reason.
You see - however intricate a market economy is, however complex and sophisticated, it is not a product of a human reason or design but a spontaneous process, much like social institutions, human languages, biological evolution and some other phenomena.
People (positivists, historicists) had hard time recognising that such complex phenomema could arose without being designed by intent and once you mistakenly believe that it was human reason that designed some institution, it's only natural to assume that reason can improve on it.
miko