Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Eulogy on Armen Alchian by Steven N.S. Cheung (張五常)

Armen Alchian, My Friend, My Mentor
by
Steven N.S. Cheung
February 21, 2013

Armen Albert Alchian (1914-2013) passed away last February 19.  That evening, I was putting final touches to an article explaining Alchian’s contributions (and those of Harold Demsetz) to the theory of  economic organization.  In the last paragraph I wrote: "Alchian, at the age of 98, is still around."  Just hours later, emails came in from all over telling me that he was gone.  What an unhappy coincidence!


Six years ago, Armen began suffering from brain degeneration, so much so that he stopped responding to communications from me and my wife Linda.  A few months before that, Yoram Barzel told me that Armen’s memory had deteriorated.  Since that time, we (and other friends of Armen) knew that the day of farewell is nigh.  My son Ronald, who is in medical research, said: "Dad, Alchian is a very old man, and there are many possible reasons for such a condition in the aged like him."

During the past several years, increasing numbers of friends and colleagues have forwarded to me Internet articles and pages which contain glowing appreciations of Alchian's scientific contributions.  "Why hasn't Armen Alchian won the Nobel Prize in Economics?" "The greatest economist in the world!"  "The most outstanding price theorist ever lived!"  People closer to Alchian tend to hold him in higher regard.  In the early part of the 1970s, John McGee and I hailed Alchian as the best economic scholar on earth.  Yoram Barzel, another colleague at the University of Washington who was then not acquainted with Alchian, was bemused by our bold assertion.  But after getting to know Armen, Yoram concurred that he deserved the accolade.

Alchian never engaged in self-promotion, and he never cared about journal rankings.  Kenneth Arrow, Armen’s former colleague at RAND, told a story about the classic paper "Costs and Outputs," which was written by Alchian in 1957 and accepted for publication in the American Economic Review.  Now AER was (and is) one of the profession’s leading journals.  However, when invited to contribute to a Festschrift in honor of Bernard F. Haley, Alchian decided to withdraw this piece from the AER and to publish it in the volume instead.  Who else would do something like this?  I know I can't.  But under Armen's influence, I have at least learned to ignore the ranking of journals and submit my papers to editors on friendly terms.

Refusal to fame-seeking has a cost.  A quarter of a century ago Alchian was not as well-known in Europe as his contributions merited.  In 1985, the editors of New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics invited me to contribute four entries to its new edition---viz., "common property rights," "economic organization and transaction costs," "Ronald Coase," and "Armen Alchian."  The Dictionary only published entries of reputable economists above the age of sixty, and strict word limits were imposed – a few thousand words for "Coase," but a mere few hundred for "Alchian."  How could I possibly summarize Alchian's contributions within such an exiguous word count?  When I apologized to Armen for my inadequate coverage in the Dictionary, typically he just smiled and said, "That's not important."

To write about "Armen Alchian," I can flow endlessly like the Yangtze River. This I have done, in numerous Chinese articles.  In choosing to express my thoughts in Chinese rather than English I was hoping that the life, times and works of a great master would enhance the interest of economics among my own countrymen.  I am sure the name of A.A. Alchian will live long and famously in the annals of Chinese economics.

I started attending Alchian's UCLA lectures in 1963, and became what the Chinese would say as a student inside his chamber two years later.  My doctoral dissertation, The Theory of Share Tenancy, was written under the co-supervision of Armen Alchian and Jack Hirshleifer.  Having expressed my gratitude for Alchian's teaching (including private lessons on how to write better English) in previous articles, I will not repeat these things here.  However, I must declare once again that Alchian taught me to be scrupulous about research, to use economic theories to explain real-world observations, and to adhere strictly to the principles of the seeker after truth.

True scholars – individuals who are genuinely interested in analysis and thinking and to know the causes of things – are rare in the economics profession.  Lucky is me, to have met a number of true scholars besides Armen Alchian.  But Armen is the only individual who persistently maintained the unadorned and scientifically-driven curiosity of a genius-child.

One time Armen returned from a trip to Japan, and summoned me to his office.  I first thought that he was going to give me some important advice.  It turned out that he wanted to show me a gift that he brought back from Japan.  What was it?  It was a little paper box with nothing inside.  What was so special about this box?  It was  wrapped in a single piece of paper, similar to those wrappings that we commonly see in the street markets in Hong Kong.  Obviously Armen had never seen something like that before.  He said, "Asian people are so smart.  Why couldn't we think of using a piece of paper to wrap things in such a simple way?"

I was born and raised in Sai Wan Ho in Hong Kong.  As a young man, I was given to wandering around the area, learning about countless trivial things.  Every time I talked to Armen about this street-wise "knowledge" he would be so intrigued and would start asking all kinds of interesting questions.  I once described to him the process of bilateral bargaining in a fiercely competitive market.  We had several exchanges about the economics behind such behavior, but could not come up with a satisfactory explanation.  I finally found the answer some twelve years ago, but unfortunately did not have the opportunity to explain it to Armen.  I never had the opportunity to tell him my explanations for tie-in sales and full-line forcing either.  Had he known about my discoveries, he would no doubt be excited and relentlessly cross-examine my answers.

When Alchian was thinking about retirement in 1976, his friends organized a Conference in his honor.  Given the large number of Alchian admirers, this happened to be just the first of at least four similar events.  In the first Conference I presented the paper, "Why are Better Seats Underpriced?"--- it was an attempt to overturn the explanation Alchian gave in 1964 on why premium seats in Rose Bowl games were underpriced.  After reading my piece, Armen did not say anything.  Thirty years later I sent him a collected volume of my English articles, in which I included the underpricing analysis.  In his reply he praised that article --- and that article only!

The scientifically-driven curiosity of Alchian has permanently influenced my attitude towards research.  In my doctoral thesis, I observed that the early stage of the land reform in Taiwan saw a rapid surge in the production of a plant named citronella, and provided a clear explanation for this fact based on my theory of share tenancy.  Alchian became seriously interested in the plant itself, and insisted that I study details of its cultivation methods as well.

To do research, to know the causes of things, we cannot ignore details.  Ever since my first day as an economist, I have never put much weight on statistical data (from whatever source) and on regression analysis.  But I have always emphasized facts in detail.  Without the nitty-gritty, economics would tend to become colorless and boring: and research on uninteresting problems is not terribly meaningful.  It was from Alchian, the eternally curious genius-child who was so fond of asking fundamental questions, that I learned to pay close and serious attention to facts in detail.

When it comes to personalities, Alchian and I are dramatically different.  He was a modest gentleman.  As Ronald Coase wrote, "Alchian is classical in manners as well as in thought."  No one would ever describe me that way.  I may not be a good imitator of Alchian’s grace and polish, but I have managed to follow his integrity as a scholar.  As academics, our job is to explain the world, and perhaps (sometimes) to make policy recommendations.  Anything else is beyond our ambit.  This is the line drawn by Alchian, and one who crosses it can no longer be deemed to be a genuine scholar.  As a Chinese who is deeply concerned about China’s future, I have written extensively on economic reforms in China.  Although I may lash out now and then at the state of the world, I have never transgressed the boundary Alchian drew on the ground.  In discussing my views about transaction costs and the delineation of rights to the Chinese people, I have often alluded to the influence of Ronald Coase.  But in terms of the scientific methodology, the close scrutiny of facts and details and scholarly integrity, I learned it all from Armen Alchian.

Back in the old days at UCLA, it was not easy for graduate students to discuss research ideas with Alchian in person.  Most students harbored the impression that he was aloof and not very approachable.  I shared the same view initially, but discovered the contrary later.  The following is a true story.

In early 1967, after finishing the first lengthy chapter of my thesis, I received news from Hong Kong that my elder brother (who was a year older) had passed away.  Understanding that my mother must be shattered by the death of her favorite son, I thought about giving up at UCLA and returning to Hong Kong to be near her.  At that time I was already an assistant professor at the California State University at Long Beach.  I drove back to LA to tell Jack Hirshleifer the sad news and my intention to quit.  Hirshleifer thought that it would be a pity to abandon my dissertation, on which I had already made very good progress.  He then said he would discuss with other members of my thesis committee the possibility of granting me a PhD on the strength of the first long chapter alone.

That afternoon I went to see Alchian, planning to tell him what I told Hirshleifer.  Alchian obviously knew what I had in mind.  But before I had a chance to say anything, he said, "Don't tell me anything about your personal matters."  So I left without a word.  One day later in Long Beach, I received a letter from Alchian with a $500 check enclosed and simply two lines: "You can buy candies with this $500 or you can hire a typist to help you finish your dissertation as quickly as possible."  This $500 was equivalent to my one month’s gross salary, so it was not a small amount.  What other alternatives did I have?  In less than two months I wrapped up my dissertation.  Alchian said it was a miracle.  In retrospect, I regret cashing that check and spending that $500.  If I had kept the check, I could now show it to my children, grandchildren, and students while telling them this proud story.  I know Armen would say, “Steve, put that check up for auction and see how much it would fare now.”

I spoke to Armen's wife and daughter on the phone this morning.  They said, "He has gone to a better place." 

(This eulogy was written in Chinese on February 21, 2013, published in the Hong Kong Economic Journal and several blogs in China on Feb. 26, 2013, and translated into English by the collaboration of Fred K. Luk, Kam-Ming Wan, Chi-Wa Yuen, and Michael T. Cheung.)



The chinese version of this article can be found:
http://blog.sina.com.cn/s/blog_47841af70102e1yi.html



Sunday, March 3, 2013

Remembering Armen Alchian


The Economics profession has lost a giant today. Professor Armen Alchian passed away peacefully in his sleep at his home in Los Angeles on February 19, 2013. He was 98 years old.

Armen Alchian was influential in many areas of economics including Law and Economics, Industrial Organization, and Macroeconomics. He dedicated his entire academic life and service to the Department of Economics at UCLA, starting in 1946. Like Ronald Coase (Nobel laureate in Economics in 1991), Armen Alchian was not a prolific writer. His articles, however, were both deeply insightful and highly influential. For example, his article on “Uncertainty, Evolution, and Economic Theory” is still widely cited today - more than 60 years after its original publication in 1950. Similarly, his paper (coauthored with Harold Demsetz) on “Production, Information Costs, and Economic Organization” was selected as one of the top 20 articles in the past century published in the American Economic Review, a leading journal for the profession.

His contributions in Economics have been extensively written about and deeply appreciated among first-rate economists. For example, James Buchanan (Nobel laureate in Economics in 1986) regarded Armen Alchian as the best blackboard economist that he has ever known; Kenneth Arrow (Nobel laureate in Economics in 1972) and Oliver Williamson (Nobel laureate in Economics in 2009) consider Alchian an icon in the profession; and Ronald Coase (Nobel laureate in Economics in 1991) regards him as the best modern economist to use the most fundamental economic forces to explain a wide variety of apparently completely different problems. For a more detailed description of his contributions in Economics, please visit the memoriam page of UCLA Department of Economics at http://www.econ.ucla.edu/news/alchian/.

Although his work was highly influential and many people in the profession believe that he deserved to win the Nobel Prize in Economics, this recognition never came to him. Frederick Hayek (Nobel laureate in Economics in 1974) once claimed that “There are two economists who deserve the Nobel prize because their work is important but won't get it because they didn't do a lot of work: Ronald Coase and Armen Alchian”. Ironically, Frederick Hayek was half wrong as Ronald Coase won the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1991.

Nevertheless, his influences on teaching and learning, albeit important, were less extensively discussed. This article attempts to fill this void. For nearly half a century, Professor Alchian’s influence was felt strongly among students at UCLA. In fact, he was a legend to generations of graduate students there. Armen Alchian trained an “army” of highly successful students including academic scholars in top universities around the globe, judges, and policymakers. One of his best known students is William F. Sharpe, who received the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1990 for his work on finance. William Sharpe describes Professor Alchian’s teaching as follows: “Armen Alchian was my role model at UCLA. He taught his students to question everything; to always begin an analysis with first principles; to concentrate on essential elements and abstract from secondary ones; and to play devil’s advocate with one’s own ideas.”

To Armen Alchian, learning was never unidirectional but a two-way process in which teachers and students learn from each other. More importantly, he always put learning first. His motto was: “what students learn and learn well is what counts and not what you (the teacher) explain to them about what you know”. Therefore, Professor Alchian rarely “explained” any economic concepts in the classroom. Instead, he used a Socratic approach to let students actively participate in the discussion and learn from each other.

This teaching approach has two advantages. First, it stimulates students’ thinking and fosters creativity. Professor Alchian prepared mysterious questions (or riddles) and challenged students to explain them. For example, when he taught the concept of price discrimination, he did not start with an outright definition. Instead, he asked students why automakers in Korea were selling their cars in the U.S. at a lower price than in Korea despite transportation costs. This method encouraged students to learn the underlying economic principles and know how to apply them in a real world setting. It also forced students to explore other possible ways to explain the same phenomenon. This sort of creative thinking is essential in economics because in the real world facts can often be consistent with more than one underlying theory.

Second, this teaching approach provides opportunities for students to have their misconceptions corrected. Many students who have prior training in Economics believe that they understand Economics. However, when you ask them seemingly basic concepts, they often stumble. For example, what is opportunity cost? If you play tennis and suffer from a sore elbow afterward, does the cost of playing tennis include the resulting sore elbow? What is the law of demand? Investors sometimes employ momentum trading strategy and buy stocks when prices are on the rise. Is this behavior a violation of the first law of demand? Alternatively, can the demand curve be upward sloping?

Professor Alchian emphasized the importance of expressing your ideas to others. In the classroom, he would ask students to explain passages or examples in the textbook. His philosophy was “if you cannot express it clearly, you don’t know it”. For those who were brave enough to try, he would reward students with extra credits (a better grade) for not just learning the concepts but also demonstrating the ability to articulate them correctly. To him, learning began in the classroom, but it did not stop there. Indeed, Professor Alchian would occasionally call up employers of his former students to inquire if his students had expressed certain concepts (that they learnt in the classroom) to their bosses.

His teaching style was similar to that of his writing. Professor Alchian included only the most essential concepts or materials in his class and always abstracted from the tangential ones. It is with great sadness that Economics has lost a Master today. Armen Alchian has left a rich legacy as an economist and a teacher. Not only did he develop many beautiful yet basic economic concepts, he enriched many lives. He will be sorely missed.

悼念一位大師─阿爾欽  


世界經濟學界痛失一位巨匠。 2013 年2月19日,阿爾欽(Armen Alchian)教授【附圖】在洛杉磯家中於睡夢中安然離世,享年98 歲。眾所周知,阿爾欽教授在涉及產權經濟學、產業組織及宏觀經濟學等眾多經濟領域極富影響力;自1946 年,他將畢生精力奉獻給加州大學洛杉磯分校(UCLA)的教學研究工作。

正如Ronald Coase(1991 年諾貝爾經濟學獲獎者)一樣,阿爾欽不是一位多產作家;然而,他的著作充滿洞察力,並對經濟學界產生重大影響,他於上世紀50 年代發表的著名論文《不確定性、演化與經濟理論》在今天仍被廣泛引用;此外,他與Harold Demsetz 共同寫就的《生產、資訊費用和經濟組織》,被世界經濟學頂級期刊《美國經濟評論》選為「100年來最具影響力的20篇論文」。

教師學生互相學習

阿 爾欽對經濟學的貢獻被眾多世界一流的經濟學家廣泛傳頌。James Buchanan (1986 年諾貝爾經濟學獲獎者)認為,阿爾欽是他所結識的最出色理論型經濟學家,Kenneth Arrow(1972 年諾貝爾經濟學獲獎者)與Oliver Williamson(2009 年諾貝爾經濟學獲獎者)視阿爾欽為學界的一個標誌;Ronald Coase 稱頌阿爾欽是最出色的現代經濟學家。阿爾欽擅長以最基本的經濟學理論解釋眾多領域的問題。如欲瞭解更多阿爾欽在經濟學領域的貢獻,可瀏覽UCLA 紀念主頁(http://www.econ.ucla.edu/news/alchian/ )。

儘管阿爾欽在學界影響深遠,並且很多學者 認為他有實力獲得諾貝爾獎,但是他最終沒能獲得這一殊榮。Frederick Hayek(1974 年諾貝爾經濟學獲獎者)曾表示, 「我認為有兩位經濟學家,憑藉他們的傑出工作,理應獲得諾貝爾獎,但是由於他們的實際工作量較小而沒有得獎,他們是Ronald Coase(按其後在1991獲獎)與阿爾欽。」阿爾欽儘管對學術教育影響深遠,卻很少被人提及,希望本文能盡力填補這一空白。

近半個世 紀,阿爾欽在UCLA 的學生中極具影響力。事實上,對於一代又一代UCLA 學生來說,他是一個傳奇。阿爾欽培養了一批頗有建樹的學生,包括眾多世界著名大學的頂級學者、法官及政策機構的高級官員,其中一個是William F. Sharpe ─在1990 年,他被授予諾貝爾經濟學獎,以表彰其在金融經濟學方面的傑出貢獻。William Sharpe 這樣評論阿爾欽的教學: 「阿爾欽是我在UCLA 時的榜樣。

他教導學生學會質疑,從基礎理論入手進行分析,關注要素並去繁就簡,勇於挑戰 自己的固有想法。」對於阿爾欽,學習從來都不是單向的知識傳授,它是一個雙向過程,教師與學生互相學習;更重要的是,在教學中,阿爾欽始終把學習放在首 位,他的座右銘就是「重要的是學生學到了什麼,而不是你(教師)傳授了多少知識」;因此,阿爾欽在課堂上很少直接介紹經濟學概念。他用類似於蘇格拉底的教 學方式來啟發學生,鼓勵他們積極參與討論並互相學習。

強調要表達自我觀點

這種教學方式有兩方面優點。首先,它 鼓勵學生思考並培養學生的創造力。阿爾欽準備了許多玄妙的問題(或謎題),並要求學生們解答。例如,當講解價格歧視理論(price discrimination)時,阿爾欽不會直接提出定義,反之,他會詢問學生: 「儘管需要承擔高昂的運輸費用,為什麼韓國汽車製造商仍然會以低於本國市場的價格在美國銷售其汽車?」這種教學方式鼓勵學生掌握現象背後的經濟理論,並知 道如何在實際生活中應用。它也促使學生努力探索社會現象的其他可能解釋。這一點非常重要,因為現實中同一個現象可以從很多角度去詮釋。

第二 點,阿爾欽的教學方式讓學生有機會糾正自己的誤解。許多曾經學習過經濟學的學生認為,他們已掌握這一學科;然而,他們有可能被一些看似基礎的概念絆倒,例 如,什麼是機會成本?如果你打網球之後感到手臂酸痛,打網球這一行為的機會成本包括手臂酸痛這一結果嗎?什麼是需求定律?根據動量交易策略,投資者購買價 格上漲的股票,此現象違反需求定律嗎?或者,需求曲線有可能顯示為向上傾斜嗎?

阿爾欽強調向他人表達自我觀點的重要性。在課堂上,他會要求學生解釋書本上的段落或事例。他的理念是, 「如果你不能清楚地表達某件事,說明你還沒有真正理解它」。對於那些勇於嘗試的學生,他以學分(或更好的成績)來獎勵他們不斷學習,以及能準確表達自己觀點的能力。

對他而言,學習起源於課堂,但並不結束於此。為了達到這一目的,阿爾欽不時聯絡自己學生的現任僱主們,瞭解他的學生是否曾向上司表述過特定的(他們曾在課堂中學到的)概念。

他的教學風格與寫作風格類似。在課堂上,阿爾欽只講解最重要的概念及內容。他的演講簡明扼要,卻直探根本。

今天,我們為經濟學界失去一位大師感到萬分悲痛。作為一位經濟學家和教授,阿爾欽為我們留下了豐富的遺產,他提出了許多耀眼卻基礎性的經濟學概念,並影響了眾多學者。

更重要的是,其言傳身教,極大的影響及富豐了一眾學生的生命。

在此,我們沉痛悼念並永遠懷念授業恩師阿爾欽!

作者為香港理工大學會計及金融學院助理教授

尹錦銘

[The author is very grateful to Mike Akemann, Arline Alchian Hoel, (Ginger) Zhe Jin, Shijun Liu, Fred Luk, Philip Tzang for their insightful comments.  Thanks also to Xinran Li and Y.K. Fu for their translation and editorial services.  The Chinese version of this article was published in the Hong Kong Economic Journal (信報) on 2/27/2013]

Below include other articles on remembering Armen Alchian (update frequently):

UCLA Dept. of Economics (including Harold Demsetz, David Levine, and John Riley):
http://www.econ.ucla.edu/news/alchian/

Stanford University Dept. of Economics:
http://economics.stanford.edu/news/esteemed-economist-armen-alchian-died-today-february-19-2013

Los Angeles Times:
http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/latimes/obituary.aspx?page=lifestory&pid=163245781#fbLoggedOut

David Henderson (Hoover Institute, Stanford University):
http://econlog.econlib.org/archives/2013/02/armen_alchians.html

Tom Hubbard (Kellog School of Management, Northwestern University):
http://www.digitopoly.org/2013/02/20/a-legend-in-economics-passes/

Robert Higgs (Senior Fellow, the Independent Institute):
http://bastiat.mises.org/2013/02/armen-alchian-april-12-1914-february-19-2013/



Daniel Benjamin (Senior Fellow, Property and Environment Research Center):
http://perc.org/blog/memoriam-armen-alchian-1914-2013

Peter J. Boettke (George Mason University):
http://www.coordinationproblem.org/2013/02/economic-forces-at-work-armen-alchian-1914-2013.html

David Glasner (Economist, Federal Trade Commission):
http://uneasymoney.com/2013/02/25/armen-alchian-the-economists-economist/

Charles Rowley (President and General Director, The Locke Institute):

http://charlesrowley.com/2013/02/20/armen-alchian-1914-2013-great-economist-denied-an-earned-nobel-prize/

In Chinese:

Steven N.S. Cheung ( 张五常):
http://blog.sina.com.cn/s/blog_47841af70102e1yi.html

In Audio:


Don Boudreaux (Cato Institute):
http://www.cato.org/multimedia/daily-podcast/remembering-armen-alchian