This first essay in the book explores
John Neville Keynes's distinction between
positive and normative economics, what
is vs. what
ought to be in economic matters. The essay sets out an
epistemological program for Friedman's own research. The essay argues that economics as
science should be free of normative judgments for it to be respected as objective and to inform normative economics (for example whether to raise the
minimum wage). Normative judgments frequently involve implicit
predictions about the consequences of different policies. The essay suggests that such differences in principle could be narrowed by progress in positive economics (1953, p. 5). The essay argues that a useful economic theory should
not be judged primarily by its
tautological completeness, however important in providing a consistent system for classifying elements of the theory and validly deriving implications therefrom. Rather a theory (or hypothesis) must be judged by its: •
simplicity in being able to predict at least as much as an alternate theory, although requiring less information •
fruitfulness in the precision and scope of its predictions and in its ability to generate additional research lines (p. 10). In a famous and controversial passage, Friedman writes that: :Truly important and significant hypotheses will be found to have "assumptions" that are wildly inaccurate descriptive representations of reality, and, in general, the more significant the theory, the more unrealistic the assumptions (in this sense) (p. 14). This is because such hypotheses and descriptions extract only those crucial elements sufficient to yield relatively precise, valid predictions, omitting a welter of predictively irrelevant details. Of course descriptive unrealism by itself does not ensure a "significant theory" (pp. 14–15). From such Friedman rejects testing a theory by the realism of its assumptions. Rather simplicity and fruitfulness incline toward such assumptions and postulates as
utility maximization,
profit maximization, and
ideal types—not merely to
describe (which may be beside the point) but to
predict economic behavior and to provide an engine of analysis (pp. 30–35). On profit maximization, for example, firms are posited to push each line of action to the point of equating the relevant
marginal revenue and
marginal cost. Yet, answers of businessmen to questions about the factors affecting their decisions may show no such calculation. Still, if firms act
as if they are trying to maximize profits, that is the relevant test of the associated hypothesis (pp. 15, 22, 31). ==Place in economic methodology==