Political Cover
Before even getting into my current issue of Technology Review, I am gravely disappointed to see an unmistakable signal of political favoritism. The cover of the September/October issue featuring Senator Barack Obama, the article on his campaign’s Web strategy, and the profile of his economic advisor Austan Goolsbee combine to form a clear message: Technology Review is a liberal rag. I read further and now see that Obama is at “the brink of the presidency” and that he’s “a new kind of presidential candidate.” Posing as innocuous subheaders, these sound bites are consistent with Obama’s campaign rhetoric. Such favoritism has no place in your magazine: it is inconsistent with your mission.
Ben Pember
Spartanburg, SC
Editor in chief Jason Pontin responds:
With great respect, Technology Review is neither liberal nor a rag. We are not political partisans. As for the stories to which you object, they were legitimate subjects for us: Senator Obama’s campaign made novel use of emerging social technologies, and Austan Goolsbee is a technology-inspired, MIT-trained economist who made his name thinking about the Internet. Finally, whatever else the senator may be as I write these words in October, he is certainly at the brink of the presidency (he is, after all, the Democratic nominee), and he certainly is, for reasons such as his race, a new kind of candidate.
Austan Goolsbee
I enjoyed reading Mark Williams’s thoughtful portrait of Austan Goolsbee (“Obama’s Geek Economist,” September/October 2008), which was several cuts above typical profiles of “great” men. Austan is indeed skilled and has sensible economic priorities. The problem that any economist faces in the political arena is this: economics is fundamentally about balancing trade-offs among competing objectives (e.g., better schools vs. lower taxes), whereas U.S. political debate is largely about telling voters that there are no trade-offs. Mainstream economists believe in the virtue of free markets. Mainstream politicians appear to believe in free lunches–and their economic advisors adopt this view. Hence, the essential qualification for a presidential economic advisor should not be economic genius alone but also strength of character–a commitment to telling the president that we cannot get something for nothing. If Austan’s resolve to speak truth to power is even roughly equal to his intellect, he will be an excellent advisor.
David Autor
Professor, MIT Department of Economics
Newton, MA
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