Essays on Genetic Evolution and Economics
Publisher: | Dissertation |
Pub date: | 1997 |
Pages: | 164 |
ISBN-10: | 0965856429 |
ISBN-13: | 9780965856423 |
Categories: | Economics Business & Economics Science |
Abstract
Ever since Charles Darwin published The Origin of Species in 1859, genetic evolutionary theory has increasingly served as the foundation for fields that deal with organisms that arose by natural selection. This thesis argues that economic theory should integrate with Darwinian theory through the creation of a "genetic evolutionary economics". The promise of genetic evolutionary economics is a better understanding of human nature and, consequently, a more accurate and comprehensive economic science.
Economic theory rests on a set of assumptions about human nature. These economic axioms concern
human genes, but there is no explicit connection between genetic evolution
and economic theory. As a result, human behavior and economic predictions
of that behavior diverge in a variety of important settings. Why, for example,
do most people save too little for the future when economics assumes that
they will save enough? Chapter 2 discusses the difficulties inherent in
the standard economic approach. Natural selection theory, the chapter argues,
is the best tool for refining the axioms of economics.
Genetic evolutionary economics allows the derivation of parameters that are intractable with standard
economic techniques. There is, for instance, an ancient debate within economics
about the role of self-interest in human affairs. Chapter 3 builds a genetic
evolutionary model relevant to this issue, and concludes that a Darwinian
lens removes many of the apparent paradoxes.
Genetic evolutionary economics
is a scientific endeavor. As such, it produces specific, testable hypotheses
concerning behavior in economically relevant situations. Chapter 4 reports
on a theoretical and experimental investigation of gift giving. A genetic
evolutionary model organizes the existing data on gift giving and makes
novel, testable predictions. Laboratory experiments, performed to test
the theory, confirm the evolutionary model's predictions.