Gunnar Myrdale's critiques of utility theory. Some implications
Abstract
This essay provides an ordered review of all the criticisms to the marginalist
theory of utility contained in The Political Element of Gunnar Myrdal. Firstly,
Myrdal’s criticises the marginalist hypothesis on human behaviour (human
beings are attracted by pleasure and repelled by pain), arguing that it is an
interpretation which precedes observation, and seeks to demonstrate its
groundlessness by drawing on advances in psychology. Also, in Myrdal’s
opinion, the theory of value based on utility is affected by a circularity of
reasoning and contains an untenable assumption on the continuity of
psychological functions and on rationality. Myrdal, also because of these
criticisms, developed a distinctive view of economic science close to that of
classical economists, and anticipated the analytical risks that the discipline might
incur if it failed to allow for the contributions of other social sciences