In “Up to Speed, but Still Lagging Behind” Matias Vernengo presents an important critique of Gary Gorton’s and Andrew Metrick’s (GM) “speed read” survey, “Getting up to Speed on the Financial Crisis” which is to be published in the Journal of Economic Literature, the predominant U.S. general literature survey journal in the economics profession. As Vernengo shows in his Triple Crisis blog piece, the Gorton and Metrick piece demonstrates just how far behind mainstream economics is in its understanding of the causes, dynamics and impacts of the financial crisis, both in an absolute sense, and also – and this was Vernengo’s main point – compared with the rich heterodox literature that both predicted the crisis and has been analyzing it dynamics since it has broken out.
In fact, the Gorton and Metrick piece presents an even more devastating picture of the ability of mainstream economics to “get up to speed” than Vernengo suggests. For it essentially admits that mainstream economics, which, for the last several decades, has cost society millions and millions of dollars on highly paid economists’ salaries at elite universities and prominent public institutions such as the IMF, the Federal Reserve and all the Federal Reserve Banks which have armies of economists– to say nothing of the high priced economists working in financial institutions themselves – completely missed the financial crisis and, according to Gorton and Metrick, are just now getting up to speed.