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  • I have always been very uneasy about economists stating that they they are producing

  • a theory in which they assume that people are rational, utility maximizers. The two

  • elements that I don't like...one, is the idea that they are rational and the other thing

  • is, what they're rational about, namely, maximizing utility. And I don't know whether you in your

  • writing use this phrase, but lots of economists do. Let's start with utility. I don't understand

  • what it even means, because you can't put a little measure into a person's brain and

  • read off utility and Irving Fisher had the idea of this unit...until...we know there

  • isn't such a unit. Why can you talk about maximizing something that you can't measure?

  • BECKER: Alright, this is a good subject to start with, because I think we do disagree

  • on this one. And I think you hit the nail right on the head with (regards to this being)

  • a serious disagreement. I do believe that it's useful. And that's all I would say, it's

  • a useful way of looking at consumer behavior...to assume that they're maximizing utility. Whether

  • we want to call that rational or not...to me (that) is a secondary issue, but I do believe

  • they are maximizing utility. It's not that I believe there is such a unit of until that

  • we could ever measure. To me, maximizing utility simply means the following: That consumers

  • can order all the opportunities they have available to them...possible choices. They

  • can order them so they prefer some more then to others. They can rank them. And they have

  • limited resources. They have limited income...wealth, time, whatever it may be. And that they attempt

  • to choose that possibility...that combination of goods and so on that is ranked the highest

  • consistent with their limited resources. Now I think this is a testable theory. That we

  • can test it by various implications about how they would respond to prices, income,

  • changes in wages, whole host of other patterns. It can become a very rich theory. I think

  • it is becoming a very rich theory. It's not an empty theory. But it does not require the

  • assumption that everybody has some kind of utils in their head that they're calibrating

  • and they convey this gives me ten utils and five...Anyone can do away with utils entirely,

  • but just ask where do they prefer...they want to get more rather than less. They want to

  • do that in goods that they have a higher preferences for, rather than others. And my claim would

  • be, this isn't the best theory possible, but it's the best theory that we have. I don't

  • know of any alternative that gives us the insight that this does.

  • COASE: You just said that one can get rid of it, why don't we get rid of it and just

  • study choices? People choose and we can study what choices they make and we can then discuss

  • whether their consistent or not...which is in some ways necessary for some of the tests.

  • My guess would be that you find a lot of inconsistencies in consumer behavior.

  • BECKER: Well, I think consistency is the task that, in fact, one can show that the usual

  • theory in terms of ranking and ordering, complete ordering of opportunities, is basically equivalent

  • to inconsistency tests that people behave consistently. Now maybe there had be a lot

  • of inconsistencies. But let me sort of point out that there had been a few attempts to

  • study the problem of consistency. Not so much with individual household data, but with more

  • group data, because one hasn't had the rich household data to do that, which is a limitation.

  • Let's say if people looked at long term English consumption patterns, American patterns, patterns

  • of different groups comparing different countries...and it had been very difficult to find dramatic,

  • very common examples of inconsistent behavior in that type of data. I'm sure they'll show

  • up more commonly in individual... COASE: You know a lot of work is being done

  • in showing that there are anomalies in individual behavior. I don't know about this well, but

  • it wouldn't surprise me if they're right. In fact...

  • BECKER: But its been only based on experimental evidence not on actual choices. And I think

  • you and I would agree that we don't necessarily have this same theory to predict how people

  • behave in experimental situations as they would behave in market situations.

I have always been very uneasy about economists stating that they they are producing

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