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Shouldn't believe the economists forecasts.......



larus

Well-known member
Interesting article from the Allister Heath - Telegraph (non political). Maybe some should consider this when quoting economic predictions from various bodies etc.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business...-not-the-economists-for-the-effects-of-the-b/

One of the greatest problems for business, investors and anybody seeking to understand the world is distinguishing real, relevant events from useless, misleading background noise. This is especially true in an age of costless digital publishing and social media.


Anybody who manages to do this successfully more often than not gains a dramatic advantage: it’s a version of what hedge funders call alpha – the ability to generate a return in excess of a benchmark without having to take on additional risk. Some investors possess alpha-qualities – but so do some economists and political analysts.


The Brexit debate is one area that is replete with worthless noise – in the jargon favoured of economists, the noise-to-signal ratio is appalling. This is not a partisan point: all sides are at it. Most pronouncements and warnings are little better than spam, but it is essential for those trying to decipher trends to wade through it all.


What value should we place on the CBI’s Industrial Trends survey, which was good (but is quite volatile)? Or on Lloyd’s of London warning that Brexit could hurt it (even though the market has traded with Europe for centuries, derives 11pc of its gross premia from the EU and would lose just 4pc of revenues in a worst-case scenario, less than the 4.7pc year-on-year increase in premiums as reported in converted sterling recorded in 2015)? Or that UK car production is at a 14-year high and booming? Or that 5,500 UK companies use financial services passports to sell their wares to the EU?


As it turns out, I think all of these facts are worthy of consideration; all help paint a picture of the health of the economy and the challenges and trade-offs that our Brexit negotiators will need to address.


Paradoxically, the biggest source of white noise are economists. Much of modern macroeconomics is bunkum, which means that its findings and predictions contribute negatively to the sum total of human knowledge. Paul Romer, one of the world’s preeminent macroeconomists and a professor at the Stern School of Business at New York University, has made his own inflammatory contribution to this debate, and many are now being forced to address this critical problem.


In The Trouble with Macroeconomics, a working paper, he argues: “For more than three decades, macroeconomics has gone backwards.” The emperor is stark naked. He claims that “post-real macroeconomics illustrate a general failure mode of a scientific field that relies on mathematical theory.”


It’s devastating stuff, but Romer is right. Academic macroeconomic theory is broken – but so are the models used by central banks and the spreadsheet forecasting in the City. It’s an intellectual catastrophe. Thousands of intelligent, well-meaning economists are at best contributing noise to the debate and at worst leading governments, companies and investors down the wrong paths.


Romer’s attack on macroeconomics , if anything, doesn’t go far enough.


Progress had indeed been made by the 1970s, in particular as a result of Milton Friedman and Anna J Schwartz’s Monetary History of the United States, a book that Romer agreed was a scientific triumph. But the economic consensus – the majority view – keeps calling the big macroeconomic questions wrong. It failed to see the boom of the 1920s, it didn’t predict the Great Depression (those such as Ludwig von Mises or FA Hayek, who did, were ignored), it messed up disastrously during the 1930s on everything from the gold standard to the reaction to the Depression, before catching the pernicious Keynesian virus.


It wrongly fell in love with central planning in the Second World War and in the 1960s Paul Samuelson’s best-selling economic textbooks were happily predicting that Soviet per capita income would soon catch up with America.


On the greatest question ever – is capitalism or communism best – the economic establishment got it wrong. Not content with that, the consensus failed to see the stagflation of the 1970s coming (it was deemed impossible by simplistic Keynesians); 364 economists campaigned against Margaret Thatcher’s macroeconomic policies of the early 1980s (most still don’t get it); they didn’t spot the bubble of the 1980s or the subsequent housing crash and they backed the disastrous European Exchange Rate mechanism.


It’s almost a case of take your pick – choose a disastrous policy and you can be sure that most economists backed it. In a poll in 1979, 65 per cent of economists said joining the euro would have been in the UK’s interest; that number rose to 73 per cent of among those specialising in the economics of the EU and of monetary union. Then they all missed the financial crisis, and they missed the recovery.


More recently, the economic consensus (as against a few brilliant exceptions) also failed to predict everything from the collapse of inflation, the UK jobs boom to the productivity slowdown, not forgetting that many saw a non-existent double or even triple dip recession coming a few years ago.


A month or two ago, the consensus was predicting immediate Armageddon, a Lehman-style freezing of markets, and in many cases a recession or numerous negative quarters of growth if we voted Brexit. It’s a woeful, abysmal record, one for which the very concept of “rewards for failure” was invented.


So yes, Romer is right – and if anything, he doesn’t go far enough. So those seeking out alpha – when it comes to Brexit or anything else – need to tread carefully. They must weigh up the evidence, the claims and counter-claims on all issues. But the fact that 90pc of economic forecasters agree with something should be no more relevant than the latest phase of the moon.
 






Neville's Breakfast

Well-known member
May 1, 2016
13,450
Oxton, Birkenhead
Indeed, I have a degree in Economics and so am well aware of the limits of the subject and its practitioners. Some NSC posters in the Referendum debate treated the words of Economists like sacred text. I certainly raised a quizzical eyebrow when reading such posts..
I watched a documentary a few years ago where Matt Damon tackled leading economists about the financial crash in 2008. Well worth a watch.
 










JC Footy Genius

Bringer of TRUTH
Jun 9, 2015
10,568
Interesting article from the Allister Heath - Telegraph (non political). Maybe some should consider this when quoting economic predictions from various bodies etc.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business...-not-the-economists-for-the-effects-of-the-b/

One of the greatest problems for business, investors and anybody seeking to understand the world is distinguishing real, relevant events from useless, misleading background noise. This is especially true in an age of costless digital publishing and social media.


Anybody who manages to do this successfully more often than not gains a dramatic advantage: it’s a version of what hedge funders call alpha – the ability to generate a return in excess of a benchmark without having to take on additional risk. Some investors possess alpha-qualities – but so do some economists and political analysts.


The Brexit debate is one area that is replete with worthless noise – in the jargon favoured of economists, the noise-to-signal ratio is appalling. This is not a partisan point: all sides are at it. Most pronouncements and warnings are little better than spam, but it is essential for those trying to decipher trends to wade through it all.


What value should we place on the CBI’s Industrial Trends survey, which was good (but is quite volatile)? Or on Lloyd’s of London warning that Brexit could hurt it (even though the market has traded with Europe for centuries, derives 11pc of its gross premia from the EU and would lose just 4pc of revenues in a worst-case scenario, less than the 4.7pc year-on-year increase in premiums as reported in converted sterling recorded in 2015)? Or that UK car production is at a 14-year high and booming? Or that 5,500 UK companies use financial services passports to sell their wares to the EU?


As it turns out, I think all of these facts are worthy of consideration; all help paint a picture of the health of the economy and the challenges and trade-offs that our Brexit negotiators will need to address.


Paradoxically, the biggest source of white noise are economists. Much of modern macroeconomics is bunkum, which means that its findings and predictions contribute negatively to the sum total of human knowledge. Paul Romer, one of the world’s preeminent macroeconomists and a professor at the Stern School of Business at New York University, has made his own inflammatory contribution to this debate, and many are now being forced to address this critical problem.


In The Trouble with Macroeconomics, a working paper, he argues: “For more than three decades, macroeconomics has gone backwards.” The emperor is stark naked. He claims that “post-real macroeconomics illustrate a general failure mode of a scientific field that relies on mathematical theory.”


It’s devastating stuff, but Romer is right. Academic macroeconomic theory is broken – but so are the models used by central banks and the spreadsheet forecasting in the City. It’s an intellectual catastrophe. Thousands of intelligent, well-meaning economists are at best contributing noise to the debate and at worst leading governments, companies and investors down the wrong paths.


Romer’s attack on macroeconomics , if anything, doesn’t go far enough.


Progress had indeed been made by the 1970s, in particular as a result of Milton Friedman and Anna J Schwartz’s Monetary History of the United States, a book that Romer agreed was a scientific triumph. But the economic consensus – the majority view – keeps calling the big macroeconomic questions wrong. It failed to see the boom of the 1920s, it didn’t predict the Great Depression (those such as Ludwig von Mises or FA Hayek, who did, were ignored), it messed up disastrously during the 1930s on everything from the gold standard to the reaction to the Depression, before catching the pernicious Keynesian virus.


It wrongly fell in love with central planning in the Second World War and in the 1960s Paul Samuelson’s best-selling economic textbooks were happily predicting that Soviet per capita income would soon catch up with America.


On the greatest question ever – is capitalism or communism best – the economic establishment got it wrong. Not content with that, the consensus failed to see the stagflation of the 1970s coming (it was deemed impossible by simplistic Keynesians); 364 economists campaigned against Margaret Thatcher’s macroeconomic policies of the early 1980s (most still don’t get it); they didn’t spot the bubble of the 1980s or the subsequent housing crash and they backed the disastrous European Exchange Rate mechanism.


It’s almost a case of take your pick – choose a disastrous policy and you can be sure that most economists backed it. In a poll in 1979, 65 per cent of economists said joining the euro would have been in the UK’s interest; that number rose to 73 per cent of among those specialising in the economics of the EU and of monetary union. Then they all missed the financial crisis, and they missed the recovery.


More recently, the economic consensus (as against a few brilliant exceptions) also failed to predict everything from the collapse of inflation, the UK jobs boom to the productivity slowdown, not forgetting that many saw a non-existent double or even triple dip recession coming a few years ago.


A month or two ago, the consensus was predicting immediate Armageddon, a Lehman-style freezing of markets, and in many cases a recession or numerous negative quarters of growth if we voted Brexit. It’s a woeful, abysmal record, one for which the very concept of “rewards for failure” was invented.


So yes, Romer is right – and if anything, he doesn’t go far enough. So those seeking out alpha – when it comes to Brexit or anything else – need to tread carefully. They must weigh up the evidence, the claims and counter-claims on all issues. But the fact that 90pc of economic forecasters agree with something should be no more relevant than the latest phase of the moon.

Hope [MENTION=25549]5ways[/MENTION] gets to read this article, especially the last sentence. If I told him once ....

Economists should steer well clear of forecasting and stick to what they're good at .. (?) :wink:
 


Hamilton

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
12,953
Brighton
I've avoided the post Brexit debate to date because I despair.

All I will say is that nothing has actually happened yet. We are in the phoney war period. When Article 50 is triggered and negotiations start, that is when we will see what changes occur.


Sent from my iPhone in a non-Calde world :-(
 




JC Footy Genius

Bringer of TRUTH
Jun 9, 2015
10,568
I've avoided the post Brexit debate to date because I despair.

All I will say is that nothing has actually happened yet. We are in the phoney war period. When Article 50 is triggered and negotiations start, that is when we will see what changes occur.


Sent from my iPhone in a non-Calde world :-(

Not quite true .. we voted to leave the EU, the PM resigned and the new PM clearly stated on numerous occasions we are going to leave after placing key Brexiteers in major Cabinet positions. Numerous organisations/economists predicted dire short term consequences including recession. The treasury, OECD, Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley to name but a few have already rapidly rowed back on their forecasts no long predicting immediate doom and upgrading growth forecasts for 2016/17.

But I'm sure their long term forecasts will be more accurate ..... :rolleyes:
 


Hamilton

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 7, 2003
12,953
Brighton
Not quite true .. we voted to leave the EU, the PM resigned and the new PM clearly stated on numerous occasions we are going to leave after placing key Brexiteers in major Cabinet positions. Numerous organisations/economists predicted dire short term consequences including recession. The treasury, OECD, Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley to name but a few have already rapidly rowed back on their forecasts no long predicting immediate doom and upgrading growth forecasts for 2016/17.

But I'm sure their long term forecasts will be more accurate ..... :rolleyes:

As I say. Nothing has actually happened yet as the exit process has yet to begin. Those terms will be essential in determining what the impact is on the economy.


Sent from my iPhone in a non-Calde world :-(
 


larus

Well-known member
As I say. Nothing has actually happened yet as the exit process has yet to begin. Those terms will be essential in determining what the impact is on the economy.


Sent from my iPhone in a non-Calde world :-(

Although this is not the BREXIT thread, we were told that there would be major problems straight away after the vote, not just when triggering Article 50.

This article highlights the poor forecasts which economists tend to give, so why should we believe them.

It's often been said the recessions are caused when countries start to predict bad times as this affects people's behaviour, which then leads to problems. I,e, people stop buying/firms stop investing. The constant negativity may end up being the cause of any future problems, not the decision to leave a corrupt and crumbling political structure called the EU.
 




5ways

Well-known member
Sep 18, 2012
2,217
Not quite true .. we voted to leave the EU, the PM resigned and the new PM clearly stated on numerous occasions we are going to leave after placing key Brexiteers in major Cabinet positions. Numerous organisations/economists predicted dire short term consequences including recession. The treasury, OECD, Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley to name but a few have already rapidly rowed back on their forecasts no long predicting immediate doom and upgrading growth forecasts for 2016/17.

But I'm sure their long term forecasts will be more accurate ..... :rolleyes:

I was expecting something worse, but still imagine there will be a long-term chill on UK investment which can be seen in the data yet. Confidence is harder to measure. It is also true that we've got our finger on the trigger but not pulled it yet.

So let's wait and see.
 


hoveboyslim

Well-known member
Feb 7, 2004
573
Hove
Allister Heath was on Newsnight a couple of days ago. He has been very pro Brexit, so probably has his own agenda. There were lots of lies told by both sides in the debate and it really should come as no surprise that the world hasn't stopped turning post the decision. As one of the other commentators said on Newsnight; economics is not a science, it is a social science. It could be years before we can reflect on the actual effect of Brexit and that goes for a lot of economic forecasts.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 


It's like being a marathon runner approaching a drinking station at the fifteen mile stage of the race. Should I take in a bottle of water and rehydrate myself? Or, if I take in a bottle of water now, will this give me the stitch? What do the experts say?

Dunno.
 


Brovion

In my defence, I was left unsupervised.
NSC Patron
Jul 6, 2003
19,882
I've avoided the post Brexit debate to date because I despair.

All I will say is that nothing has actually happened yet. We are in the phoney war period. When Article 50 is triggered and negotiations start, that is when we will see what changes occur.


Sent from my iPhone in a non-Calde world :-(
That is so true. It has become incredibly tiresome, you can sum it up like this:

Headline: "Good economic news!"
Brexiters: "Told you so!"
Remainers: "Brexit hasn't happened yet"

Headline: "Bad economic news!"
Remainers: "Told you so!"
Brexiters: "Brexit hasn't happened yet"

Although the markets and forecasters do seem to be remarkably sanguine about the dire economic shitstorm that is apparently headed our way. And of course some of the more shrill pronouncements of the Remainers during the campaign about the Doom and Gloom that would occur as soon as we voted Leave have proved to be false. They're bound to get one of their predictions right eventually though!
 


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