Economic questions: the Joan Robinson question

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This is one of a series of posts that will ask what the most pertinent question raised by a prominent influencer of political economy might have been and what its relevance is today. A list of all posts in the series appears at the end of each entry. The origin of this series is noted here.  

Joan Robinson belongs naturally in this series for a number of reasons. One is because she spent much of her career exposing the weaknesses of orthodox economics and insisting that economics cannot escape questions of power, distribution, and ideology. She also famously warned against asking the wrong economic questions, an observation that is, if anything, more relevant now than when she first made it.

As importantly, she was one of the first women to emerge as a major economic thinker, and there have always been too few of them. In this context, it is important to note that Joan Maurice (as she then was0 studied economics at Girton CollegeCambridge and completed her studies in 1925, but due to Cambridge University's refusal to grant degrees to women until 1948, she did not formally graduate.

Most especially, she deserves her place here because, above all else, she discussed political economy and how power shapes the allocation of rewards in society.


Joan Robinson (1903 - 1983) was one of the most formidable economists of the twentieth century. A close collaborator of John Maynard Keynes and a central figure in the Cambridge school of economics, she helped shape the development of modern macroeconomics while simultaneously becoming one of its fiercest internal critics.

Robinson believed that economics was far too important to be confined to elegant models and concepts such as the abstract notion of equilibrium. In her view, the discipline had, even at the time she wrote, drifted away from the realities it was supposed to explain:

  • how wealth is produced,
  • how it is distributed, and
  • how economic systems shape human lives.

Theories that treated markets as neutral mechanisms or reduced economic life to optimisation problems struck her as intellectually evasive.

She once remarked that the purpose of studying economics is “not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists.” That warning has only grown more relevant.

Hence The Joan Robinson Question: If economics teaches students how markets supposedly work but discourages them from asking who benefits, who loses, and who holds power, what kind of knowledge is it really producing?


Economics and the problem of power

Robinson believed that mainstream economics systematically neglected power. Market outcomes were presented as the result of voluntary exchange between equal participants, yet real economies are full of asymmetries:

  • corporations dominate workers,
  • landlords dominate tenants,
  • financial institutions dominate borrowers, and
  • wealthy interests influence governments.

Ignoring power does not make it disappear. It simply hides it. By abstracting away from institutions and social relations, economics can present deeply political outcomes as technical results.

For Robinson, this was not merely a methodological problem. It was a form of intellectual blindness.

The myth of perfect competition

One of Robinson's early and most influential contributions was her work on imperfect competition. She showed that the textbook world of perfect competition, where supposedly countless firms, perfect information, and no market power, bears little resemblance to real economies dominated by large firms, strategic behaviour and barriers to entry.

Despite that, the theory of perfectly competitive markets continues to dominate economic teaching and policy advice. Robinson understood why: the model produces tidy results about efficiency and equilibrium that suit the needs of economists. Real economies are messy and contested, and that makes economics hard and unpredictable.

Rbinson's point was that when the economic model becomes more important than the world it describes, economics ceases to illuminate reality.

Capital and the Cambridge controversies

Robinson was also a central figure in the famous Cambridge capital controversies. These debates revealed deep flaws in the way mainstream economics treats capital. Orthodox theory assumed that capital could be measured independently of prices and distribution, allowing neat models of productivity and growth.

Robinson and her colleagues showed that this assumption was circular. The value of capital depends on income distribution, and income distribution depends on the value of capital. The theoretical foundations of neoclassical production theory were far less secure than textbooks implied.

The controversy exposed an uncomfortable truth: some of economics' most familiar concepts rested on fragile intellectual ground.

Economics as ideology

Robinson increasingly came to believe that economics was not simply a science but also an ideology; a way of legitimising particular social arrangements. She believed that economic theories can present existing distributions of wealth and power as natural outcomes of market forces rather than the result of political decisions. When this happens, she suggested, economics stops asking normative questions. Inequality becomes a parameter rather than a problem. The discipline begins to explain the world in ways that justify it.

Robinson warned that economists must remain alert to this danger, because the authority of economics gives its ideas immense political influence.

The role of history and institutions

Robinson also argued that economics cannot be separated from history. Institutions evolve. Technologies change. Social norms shift. A model that treats the economy as timeless and universal misses the forces that actually drive development and crisis.

She therefore urged economists to reconnect their work with economic history, politics and philosophy. Without this context, economic analysis becomes sterile, capable of solving problems that exist only inside its own models.

For Robinson, political economy was richer precisely because it refused to isolate economics from the rest of social life.

What answering the Joan Robinson Question would require

Taking Robinson seriously would require a reorientation of economics away from abstraction and toward realism. At minimum, that would involve:

  • Recognising power as central to economic outcomes, not an external complication.

  • Teaching about markets as institutions embedded in law and politics, and not as self-contained mechanisms.

  • Re-examining the theoretical foundations of production and capital, rather than treating them as settled.

  • Integrating economic history and political economy into economic education.

  • Encouraging critical thinking about economic ideas, including the possibility that widely accepted theories may serve ideological functions.

These changes would not undermine economics. They would restore its intellectual integrity.

Inference

The Joan Robinson Question challenges the discipline of economics to confront its own habits of thought. By presenting markets as neutral and models as objective, economics risks obscuring the social forces that shape economic life: power, institutions, history and politics.

Robinson's legacy is therefore not a single theory but a refusal to accept tidy explanations that conceal messy realities. She reminds us that the purpose of economic inquiry is not to defend existing arrangements, but to understand how economies actually function and how they might be improved.

To answer her question is to recognise that economics must remain self-critical if it is to remain truthful, and that the most dangerous mistake a discipline can make is to stop questioning its own assumptions.


Previous posts in this series:

  1. The economic questions
  2. Economic questions: The Henry Ford Question
  3. Economic questions: The Mark Carney Question
  4. Economics questions: The Keynes question
  5. Economics questions: The Karl Marx question
  6. Economics questions: the Milton Friedman question
  7. Economic questions: The Hayek question
  8. Economic questions: The James Buchanan question
  9. Economic questions: The J K Galbraith question
  10. Economic questions: the Hyman Minsky question
  11. Economic questions: the Joseph Schumpeter question
  12. Economic questions: The E F Schumacher question
  13. Economics questions: the John Rawls question
  14. Economic questions: the Thomas Piketty question
  15. Economic questions: the Gary Becker question
  16. Economics questions: The Greg Mankiw question
  17. Economic questions: The Paul Krugman
  18. Economic question: the Tony Judt question
  19. Economic questions: The Nancy MacLean question
  20. Economic questions: The David Graeber question
  21. The economic questions: the Amartya Sen question
  22. Economic questions: the Jesus of Nazareth question
  23. Economic questions: the Adam Smith question
  24. Economic questions: (one of) the Steve Keen question(s)
  25. Economic questions: the Stephanie Kelton question
  26. Economic questions: the Thomas Paine question
  27. Economic questions: the John Christensen question
  28. Economic questions: the Eugene Fama question
  29. Economic questions: the Thomas Hobbes Question
  30. Economic questions: the James Tobin question
  31. Economic questions: the William Beveridge question
  32. Economic questions: the William Nordhaus question
  33. Economic questions: the Erwin Schrödinger question
  34. Economic questions: the Karl Polanyi question
  35. Economic questions: the Richard Feynman question
  36. Economic questions: the Wynne Godley question
  37. Economic questions: the Erich Fromm Question
  38. Economic questions: the John Ruskin question
  39. Economic questions: the Paul Samuelson question

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