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Edward Hackett's avatar

Given the complexity of the world's economies, and then throw in a black swan like Trump, I don't see how any forecasts can be accurate. What economist would have thought we would be talking about invading Canada, taking back the Panama Canal, and attacking our institutions of higher learning? Economists generally do a good job of looking at the probable trajectory of different economies, but now that the inmates have taken control of the institution, all bets are off. The American public is very good at watching sports on TV, and they follow Hollywood very closely, but when it comes to issues that require thinking and not sound bites, they have a severe attention shortage. I predict the public won't wake up until the tariffs adversely impact their wallets. The consequences of the attacks on our universities are too far in the future for the public to understand, just as they can't come to grips with climate change. People don't want to hear the truth because it will destroy their illusions and possibly make them realize what fools they were to elect the Grifter in Chief.

Thomas L. Hutcheson's avatar

Maybe one lesson of this should be not to build models

a) that do not explicitly model policy variables and

b) using historical reduced form relationship parameters

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