Any serious economics professor will acknowledge that all the economic “laws” they teach you are basically for illustrative purposes. “Market forces” only behave as described in a perfectly free market, with perfect information on both sides of a transaction, no coercion, no monopolies, and perfectly rational participants.
I compare it to basic physics: you learn how perfectly inelastic, frictionless spheres behave, for simplicity. But perfectly inelastic, frictionless spheres aren’t real, so real experiments aren’t going to match your basic formulas. Likewise, economic laws fall apart as soon as you try to apply them to the real world.
The problem is that it’s basically impossible to isolate economic phenomena. You can conduct a gravity experiment in a vacuum tube, but you can’t make an economic vacuum tube.
“laws” like economics isn’t a psudo science.
Any serious economics professor will acknowledge that all the economic “laws” they teach you are basically for illustrative purposes. “Market forces” only behave as described in a perfectly free market, with perfect information on both sides of a transaction, no coercion, no monopolies, and perfectly rational participants.
I compare it to basic physics: you learn how perfectly inelastic, frictionless spheres behave, for simplicity. But perfectly inelastic, frictionless spheres aren’t real, so real experiments aren’t going to match your basic formulas. Likewise, economic laws fall apart as soon as you try to apply them to the real world.
At least in physics you then learn the approximations and the use cases where your formulas do work
The problem is that it’s basically impossible to isolate economic phenomena. You can conduct a gravity experiment in a vacuum tube, but you can’t make an economic vacuum tube.