Lincoln Imp
Well-known member
- Feb 2, 2009
- 5,964
If you think the IMF have been reliable in the past and on that basis you'll go with what they say in the future then it stands to reason that you place a heavy weighting of trust in those economists that wrote the reports and made those forecasts. People like Ashoka Mody for instance who wrote last week:
"...the arguments that leaving the EU would cause permanent damage to the UK are not supported by evidence"
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/b...c-consensus-on-brexit-is-flawed-a7057306.html
By your own criteria, he's one of the men you look to for informed opinions and you have to believe that he could well be right this time. You can't have it both ways.
If there are ten respected economists saying one thing and one respected economist saying another then it seems reasonable to take the majority view, surely?