Posted on 08/15/2011 10:26:23 AM PDT by Shout Bits
To some, a MBA is a yardstick of business acumen or a launch pad for great accomplishments. While graduate students are expected to exercise increased independent and critical thought, the amount of leftist indoctrination that goes unchallenged is startling. In nearly every department, the MBA curriculum has got it wrong.
Keynesianism:
MBA programs teach that government spending and expansive monetary policy stimulates GDP expansion. Keynesian formulas suggest that recessions can be cured by stimulus spending and money supply growth. Stimulus primes the pump of the economy. Well, no, stimulus has never worked, but MBA professors fail to mention this, as they also fail to mention other economists like Hayek, Taylor, and Hazlitt whose theories refute Keynes.
Keynesian stimulus does not work for two real world reasons: 1. When the government stimulates, it almost always procures things nobody needs or wants. The government spends based on political favoritism, and those items are unlikely to stimulate further productive economic activity (e.g. bridge to nowhere); and 2. People dont measure their wellbeing by GDP growth, they measure their wellbeing by prosperity. The fact that Pres. Obamas stimulus grew the public sector component of GDP did nothing for regular Americans. People do not really want more money; they really want things like food, houses, cars, and TVs. Stimulus is largely busywork that creates nothing, especially in the short term, to increase real prosperity. Paul Krugmans recent ludicrous endorsement of government spending on alien invasion preparedness as a way to grow the economy is the perfect example of Keynesianisms fatal flaw.
Currency Devaluation:
MBA programs teach the IMF mantra that when a country has a trade deficit, or it cant pay its obligations, it should devalue its currency. The theory posits that after a devaluation, the troubled countrys exports will be more competitive, imports less competitive, and soverign debt more affordable. As Argentina and every other test case has shown, this never works. MBA professors cite a J-Curve effect whereby devaluation causes the opposite of its stated goals in the short term, but as consumption and production shift, the devalued economy will reach a balance. The J-Curve must take a long time, because devalued economies continue to suffer for a long time.
Devaluation does not work because, as with Keynes, people do not want money, they want goods. No magic wand increases the real efficiency of a labor force. Further, when a government inflates its currency (devaluation), it makes foreign capital formation less attractive. Without capital formation, modern economies cannot grow, and real prosperity becomes impossible. Currency devaluations are just a form of surprise inflation, which is stealing from those who save to pay off government debt. Only an ivory tower academic can think that is the path to prosperity.
Union Management Partnerships:
MBA academics are big on labor partnerships. True to their socialist instincts, they cant believe that unions are bad for business. They laud each effort to find a new way to harmonize union and shareholder interests. In the real world, these partnerships never work. UAL gave its unions ownership and board seats, and GMs Saturn division gave unions decision authorities, but both of these experiments failed, resulting in bankruptcy. The steadily declining private sector union ranks prove that unions cause business failure wherever they take root, otherwise businesses would be inviting unions to form and their ranks would be growing. There is no aligning union and shareholder objectives; shareholders seek to avoid Ch. 11 bankruptcy at all costs, while unions see Ch. 11 as at most a temporary setback.
Efficient Markey Hypothesis:
MBA professors hate Wall Street traders because academics think that what they do is impossible. The religion of MBA finance professors is that the markets are efficient (i.e. their prices always reflect true value and that without inside information nobody can make a supernormal profit). Securities prices fall along a line that sets their price relative to their risk, so stock picking is a waste of time.
Shout Bits apologizes for the following obscure references, but every assumption underlying the efficient market hypothesis is wrong. Investors are not objectively rational; their decisions are based on needs other than risk adjusted return. Stocks returns are not a random walk; returns are auto-correlated. Stock returns correlations are not constant; in times of extreme gains or losses, correlations increase. Likewise, betas are not constant and are difficult to predict. Every foundation of the efficient market hypothesis is bunk. The efficient market hypothesis is a classic example of MBA professors living within their walls of assumptions and formulas while those less constrained by theory make a killing.
The list of MBA fallacies goes on (e.g. more regulation creates more safety, the green movement and its economy, strategic reorganization creates value, Japans model of government / private partnerships). Of course a lot of smart people earn their MBAs, but they would have been smart without them. As with liberal arts BAs, the hidden price for expanding minds at an MBA program is the indoctrination into left wing and academic fantasies that have no use in the real world. The best business education is getting ones teeth kicked in by tough competitors who know their trade and know how to win. That is a lesson that no MBA program can teach.
Saying YOUR MBA curriculum/professors were leftists does not mean that ALL MBA programs teach that hogwash.
“MBA professors hate Wall Street traders because academics think that what they do is impossible. The religion of MBA finance professors is that the markets are efficient (i.e. their prices always reflect true value and that without inside information nobody can make a supernormal profit). Securities prices fall along a line that sets their price relative to their risk, so stock picking is a waste of time.”
I will tell you why this is wrong. The market price reflects the collective opinion of all those buying and selling securities, and 50% of them are below average in analyzing information and predicting what will happen in the future. They are smarter than the general population, but they still have their own bell curve.
My brother got his MBA in the 80’s from Stanford. He has been an absolute failure in everything he has done since then. After 3 failed business and 2 divorces, he had to move home w mommy and daddy when he was 57. His wife kicked him out when she found him playing w guns in the basement. He is now 63 and working on biz no 4.
Dick Brooks learned how to pack his golden parachute getting his MBA.
Yes that was really out of left field. But I really hate the guy.
There are some left wing MBA professor out there. Fortunately my MBA was from a strictly Austrian School program. Webster University, campuses throughout the world.
Two lessons that should be learned in MBA programs:
1. Follow the money.
2. Start your own business.
If those two lessons are not taught, the MBA is crap.
There is no reason to go through an MBA just to end up as someone else’s minion.
“Keynesian formulas suggest that recessions can be cured by stimulus spending and money supply growth. Stimulus primes the pump of the economy.”
That stupid model assumes there is money in the economy that isn’t being spent and that if the government takes it and spends it the pump gets primed. It never takes into account why money is not being spent and if the government spends it why additional money would follow if it wasn’t in the first place.
Cool and insightful.
Still, can you expound on the J-curve and the effects, short, medium and long term of currency devaluations?
All of that should be relatively non-controversial.
Well, if he was playing with his gun in the basement I could understand.
I clean my pistol in the basement, but that is as much play time anything gets down there.
So can we conclude that based on your brother being a screwup and getting his MBA that all MBAs are screwups? Or getting an MBA will lead to people being losers? Or what can we learn from your experience?
That one person in thousands will end up being a screwup no matter what they study?
That’s what my MBA program taught. We had full semesters on marketing, HR, and even program management. There was a tiny bit of background on Keynes (along with Smith, Marx, and various ethical philosophers), but it wasn’t a major part of the program.
There was nothing about labor partnerships. A fair portion of the curriculum did focus on international business and corporations though.
This article was nothing like my experience in business school. Oh, and I graduated early this year, so my experience is current.
While we do discuss Keynesian Economics, we emphasize the Austrian School.
Likewise, we discuss labor - management partnerships, but analyze their strengths and weaknesses relative to union avoidance and union suppression strategies.
Sounds like the OP made a bad decision on where to go for the MBA. There are much better options out there if people are willing to look around and become informed.
Re: biz #4 — Maybe he took advice from my old coach, “Men, we’re going to keep running that play til we get it right”.
But then maybe retired Florida State coach Bobby Bowden’s comment might apply to him: “Son, you’ve got a good engine, but your hands aren’t on the steering wheel.”
I agree
People will spend hours and hours picking out their next MacBook or car but way less picking out a $100,000 graduate program
‘Twasn’t all that long ago when on Wall Street, MBA meant the dunderheads who made loans to Mexico, Brazil and Argentina.
My Mom got her MBA from Stanford too, and her class mate was Condi Rice. She had her share of lefty profs who thought so highly of themselves and couldn’t believe a certified CGA could out-think them in simple economics.
Still, can you expound on the J-curve and the effects, short, medium and long term of currency devaluations?
The J-Curve in this instance explains that people’s consumption patterns will not change quickly for many items. For example, if the US$ fell by half to the Euro, BMWs would become uncompetitive. Still, until someone started making BMW like cars in the US, people would continue to buy them, even thought the price had doubled. For the short term, the BMW trade deficit would go up due to the devaluation, but the J-Curve theory suggests that eventually, BMW-equivalent cars would be made in the US and the trade imbalance would disappear.
It is an elegant and logical theory that does not actually work out.
Still, can you expound on the J-curve and the effects, short, medium and long term of currency devaluations?
The J-Curve in this instance explains that people’s consumption patterns will not change quickly for many items. For example, if the US$ fell by half to the Euro, BMWs would become uncompetitive. Still, until someone started making BMW like cars in the US, people would continue to buy them, even thought the price had doubled. For the short term, the BMW trade deficit would go up due to the devaluation, but the J-Curve theory suggests that eventually, BMW-equivalent cars would be made in the US and the trade imbalance would disappear.
It is an elegant and logical theory that does not actually work out.
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