Welcome, Aleesha
If economics is a science, we have I think to concede that it is does nor have the explanatory scope or depth of (say) particle physics. But this sort of damaging comparison, though common, is not what is needed. Biology is also a science which lacks the explanatory scope or depth of particle physics yet its status as science is secure.
Popper may be right; there might be a reliable way of demarcating science from non-science. I am undecided about this but even if there are demarcation criteria it does not follow that while we can distinguish science from non-science, we can define the nature of science in terms of necessary and sufficient conditions: 'X is a science if and only if ...'.
#Kinds of science
A useful approach is to mark out different kinds of science. Here I'll settle for a distinction between experimental/ non-experimental science. The grounds on which economics is denied scientific status is frequently that it is a non-experimental science. There might be some a priori truths in economics but linked as it is with the management and control of the economy - within free-market or central control limits - the subject's value is likely to be a function of predictions and explanations derivable from whatever experiments we can manage. It is not clear, the putative and minuscule a priori aside, where else the predictions and explanations could come from.
#The case against economics as an experimental science
Here's a useful introductory discussion, just to set out the issues:
Paul Samuelson, Milton Friedman and Friedrich Hayek declared
long ago that economics as a discipline was not amenable to the
experimental method, just as Aristotle thought physics to be non
experimental. Only with 20-20 hindsight do such judgments
seem surprising. To understand their basis is to understand the
very nature of scientific experiments and their contributions to
science. The essence of scientific experiments is control over the
environment in which phenomena of interest take place. Of course,
by control we mean true manipulative control, not the mere
"quasi-control" sought in analyses of data gathered about naturally
occurring phenomena. Whether a discipline is judged to be
amenable to useful experimentation depends on whether the
variables that are believed to be critical to the relevant phenomena
are amenable to experimental control. The identity of these variables depends on the state of the extant theory. The state of extant
theory, in turn, depends on the available evidence, experimental
as well as non-experimental. If the variables that are crucial to
the extant theory of a discipline are currently judged to be beyond
experimental control, it seems reasonable to conclude, for the
time being at least, that such a discipline is not experimental.
The state of extant theory defines what the discipline is at any
given point of time. Received theories change over time. Paradigms shift when a complicated set of explanations based on
many variables are replaced by a simple explanation based on
fewer variables. Some variables that were believed to be "crucial"
in the old paradigm may be absent from the new. If the lack of
controllability of such variables held up the discipline from being
"experimental" in the old paradigm, the discipline may become
"experimental" in the new paradigm. The double helix model of
dna and the plate tectonic theory in geology are recent examples
of previously non-experimental disciplines becoming amenable
to certain types of experiments because of shifts in paradigms
and the accompanying simplification of theory. ('Emergence of Experimental Economics':41.)
The amenability of a discipline to experiments is not inherent
in it; it depends on the current state of its theory. When Aristotle
wrote about physics not being subject to experiments, he may have
meant that this was so with reference to the theories of physical
phenomena prevalent in his time, or their subset that was accept
able to him. Perhaps a similar interpretation would be appropriate for the judgments passed down by so many leading economists about economics not being an experimental science. How
ever, if change in theory is a precondition for the conversion of a
discipline from non-experimental to experimental, how could
this occur in economics, where no obvious paradigm shift is known
to have occurred in recent decades? How does one reconcile the
judgments of eminent economists such as Samuelson, Hayek and
Friedman with the increasing acceptance and use of experiments
in economics in recent years? Why did so many economists believe
their discipline to be non-experimental in the first place? ('Emergence of Experimental Economics':41-2.)
#The counter-argument - economics as an experimental science
The scale of macroeconomic phenomena precludes most kinds
of controlled experimentation. By the same criterion, astronomy
might also be regarded as a non-experimental science. Due to
their inability to manipulate planets, stars or galaxies, astronomers had to devise ingenious, sometimes spectacular, quasi-experiments on naturally occurring phenomena to adduce convincing evidence to reject contending theories (for instance, an
experiment during the 1914 solar eclipse verified Albert Einstein's
prediction about the curvature of space in the neighbourhood of
heavy celestial objects). It would be politically and ethically
difficult, if not impossible, to conduct macroeconomic experiments
that manipulate monetary and fiscal policies to gather observations
to verify or reject various macroeconomic theories. To this extent, the non-experimental tag assigned to economics seems justified. But these arguments do not apply to price theory or micro
economics, just as the arguments about astronomy are inapplicable to the physics and chemistry of most terrestrial phenomena.
In his introduction to Price Theory, Friedman wrote,
Economic theory, like all theory, may be thought of in two ways. It
may be thought of as a language or filing system, or it may be thought
of as a set of substantive empirical propositions. With respect to theory
in the first meaning, the relevant question to be asked is usefulness and
not Tightness or wrongness. The proposition that price is determined
by the interaction of demand and supply forces is merely an attempt to
set up a useful filing system within which there can easily be placed
under the headings "demand" or "supply" any one of the forces affecting
price. The usefulness of this filing system will in turn depend on the
substantive fact whether a listing of the forces operating on demand
contains few elements in common with the listing of the forces operating on supply. Economic theory as a list of substantive empirical propositions contains propositions which are, in principle, capable of being
tested because they attempt to be predictive. The definition of a demand curve is theory as language. However, the statement that the
demand curve slopes downward to the right is theory as a substantive
empirical proposition. It has empirically observable consequences,
whereas the definition of a demand curve does not. Theory as language coincides with Marshall's engine of analysis. His objective, as
well as that of any other investigator, is to construct a language that
will yield as many substantive propositions as possible (1962: 8).
The experimental method has proved to be a powerful engine
for generating substantive empirical propositions, and for distinguishing between competing propositions for prediction of the
same phenomena - precisely the function Friedman attributed to
a large part of economic theory.
We conjecture that the reasons for the residual distrust of experiment methods among economists are some of the same reasons that have given economics, among all social sciences, an
extraordinary degree of coherence and power - its willingness
to abstract from reality and its ability to use the mathematical
technique of optimisation as a fundamental organising principle.
Abstraction from reality is necessary for assumptions such as
atomistic competition among fully informed agents, who are
assumed to optimise for the market to arrive at an equilibrium.
However, such abstraction and optimisation are devices of
convenience to be used to build and solve simple models that
can be tested for their predictive ability; they are not to be taken
seriously in themselves. Absent experiments, and given the
limitations of quasi-experiments that depend on naturally observable phenomena alone, abstract assumptions and optimisation
came to be taken far too seriously by economists themselves.
Since we know that no laboratory market could possibly meet
all abstract assumptions and real human beings do not have
the ability to optimise complex problems by intuition alone, it
is easy to reject the potential of experiments to contribute to
economic theory. This is why the results of Smith's experiments,
conducted in the late 1950s with a mere handful of students,
came as a surprise not only to economists at large, but also to
Smith himself who was trained as an economist and continued
to regard his experiments as an avocation until well into the
mid-1970s (Smith 1991).
The case pursued ...
About the same time experimental techniques made inroads into
price theory, game theory and industrial organisation theory,
microeconomic theory began to be used to build a new macroeconomic theory. Experimental techniques have followed microeconomics into the new macroeconomics to identify substantive
empirical propositions about expectation formation, monetary policy
and inflation. Years ago, physics, with its sound experimental
foundations, had made inroads into astronomy in the form of
astrophysics. Reinhard Selten suggested a different explanation
for the mid-20th century spurt of interest in experimental economics. The appearance of von Neumann's and Morgenstern's
The Theory of Games and Economic Behaviour (1944), oligopoly
theory, and cooperative game theory offered a multitude of
solution concepts that could not be resolved by application of a
priori reasoning alone. So those who had contacts with experi
mental psychology turned to experimental methods for selecting
solution concepts. This explanation pointed to what is, perhaps, a
unique role economics experiments can play - a role in selecting
from multiple equilibria. It is consistent with the recent interest
of theorists in experiments with overlapping generations of economies with multiple equilibria.
#References
'Emergence of Experimental Economics', Economic and Political Weekly, Vol. 46, No. 35 (AUGUST 27-SEPTEMBER 2, 2011),
pp. 41-46
Published by Economic and Political Weekly.
Decision processes. Edited by R. M. Thrall, C. H. Coombs, and R. L. Davis, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1954, 332 pp.
M. Friedman, Price Theory, ISBN 10: 0202060748 / ISBN 13: 9780202060743
Published by Aldine Transaction, 1962.
J. von Neumann & O. Morgenstern, The Theory of Games and Economic Behaviour, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1944.
Vernon L. Smith, Papers in Experimental Economics. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 1991.