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Welcome to IWETHEY!

New I thought that might get a rise out of you. ;-)
"Robert" is Robert Waldmann - http://www.angrybear...t-angry-bear.html

Robert Waldmann: ...born the day after Kennedy was elected (November 9 1960).
I have a PhD in economics (Harvard 1989) and teach economics at the
University of Rome "Tor Vergata". I wasn't always like this. I have a bachelor's degree in biology.
Oddly, I don't blog much at my own site rjwaldmann about economics or Italy. Currently, I am obsessed with Obama, but I'll try not to bore people with stuff they already read 10 times today.
As an economist (roughly) I am interested in behavioral economics, growth, and the economics of inequality. Actually much of my current research, such as it is, is really in econometric methodology and statistics. I was very unorthodox in the 80s, but the orthodoxy is much less rigid now.


He seems to have the chops to know what he's talking about, and well aware of the glass walls in his house. :-)

Cheers,
Scott.
New hmm, Mises by the backdoor
If we torture the data long enough, it will confess. (Ronald Coase, Nobel Prize for Economic Sciences, 1991)
New I know who he is...
..and am not questioning his chops...but he's using the same technique he says is failed to make his point.

He's arguing from the specific to a generality...

There isn't anyone, even the folks who came up with the theories of efficient markets and resource allocation, that would pretend that those theories could be put into practice as a short term price predictor for the stock market. By their very nature, the short term and emotional factors violate the premise of "perfect information". Unless I know the specific state of mind of every single person buying that stock at their time of purchase, I don't have "perfect information".

However, when you accumulate that data to a macro level, it somewhat balances that out and higher level predictive models that trend over time and not by minute are much more predictive. They consider things that are measured...like profit level, starts, consumer confidence levels...etc.

And the "science" of building econometric models, and reading the data and the predictive behavior across all of the variables in the equation is hugely beneficial to determining public policy as it relates to what tools to use to "push" the economy in directions that it needs to go. But no, it won't help the day trader get rich.

Again, my read is that he's arguing macro theory, in order to be valid, should 100% apply to micro events, otherwise its invalid. Sort of like saying that biology isn't science because it can't predict with 100% accuracy that the single cell creature in the ocean will evolve along this specific path to become a human...every time.
I will choose a path that's clear. I will choose freewill.
New I read it a little differently.
It seemed to me that he was mainly arguing for more care in the use of language to describe, and thinking about, economic models.

He said:

I'd say that, in a standard general equilibrium model, informational efficiency does imply allocational efficiency. So to the extent that one accepts such models as guides, one should believe that, for practical purposes informational efficiency implies allocational efficiency.

The problem is that approximate informational efficiency does not imply approximate allocational efficiency.


IOW, in a model with perfect information, the allocation results do follow. However, in the real world we don't have perfect information, so we have to be more careful. Mathematics tells us that we cannot assume that a little noise in the information gives a little noise in the allocation results. It doesn't follow, no matter how much we might like it to. When talking about a "good approximation" it's important to be clear about what meaning of the term is being discussed.

It seems like a reasonable point to me.

FWIW.

Cheers,
Scott.
New like I always said about climate models
climatology is a lot like economics, we dont know enough about the peripheral effects. We see carbon rising slightly behind temperature for good reason but the pieces we dont understand are huge. Models are built using imperfect information with noise that can be adjusted the wrong way or suppressed. One fellow thought in the next 30 years we are looking at 650ppm c02 in the atmosphere with intense effort to curtail it starting now with no decent prediction as to what 650ppm actually means to the climate and ultimately the weather
If we torture the data long enough, it will confess. (Ronald Coase, Nobel Prize for Economic Sciences, 1991)
New The analogy is bad.
The Earth's climate is a complicated black box. We know much of the science. We know much of the physics; we don't know all the various pieces and how they interact with enough precision. But we're getting better.

Economics models are an attempt to explain large-scale human behavior in an economy. It's not physics - it's herd mentality. Fundamentally, economics attempts to apply mathematics to one of the social sciences. It's much less deterministic than a physical system.

Even though the climate models are still young, they're actually very good. And getting better all the time. What economic model from even 5 years ago would have predicted the Great Recession? What economic model can predict the state of the world economy in 30 years with any confidence? I'd have much more confidence in the prediction of the state of the climate from present models.

You can even play with some of them on your own PC or Mac (courtesy of your nemesis James Hansen's group ;-) - http://edgcm.columbia.edu/software2/

FWIW.

Cheers,
Scott.
New What makes economics very different from physical sciences
Elements in the system (people) are aware of the "rules" of the system and consciously alter their behavior in response to what they believe the rules to be.
--

Drew
New welcome to quantum physics
If we torture the data long enough, it will confess. (Ronald Coase, Nobel Prize for Economic Sciences, 1991)
New That's not how quantum physics works.
There are strong, well-understood rules and equations that will give you the answer to a quantum mechanics problem. The answer includes a probability.

http://en.wikipedia....B6dinger_equation

As Drew said, Economics tries to apply mathematics to Calvinball. The players are always changing the rules.

Cheers,
Scott.
New Re: That's not how quantum physics works.
yes it is, the answer depends on the observation. Is the cat dead or not?
If we torture the data long enough, it will confess. (Ronald Coase, Nobel Prize for Economic Sciences, 1991)
New Economics is not falsifiable
--

Drew
New What? ever hear of ponzi?
If we torture the data long enough, it will confess. (Ronald Coase, Nobel Prize for Economic Sciences, 1991)
New It's both.
Observation collapses the wave function. It doesn't change the physics.

More: http://en.wikipedia....%B6dinger%27s_cat

Cheers,
Scott.
New climatology isnt herd mentality? bwahahahaha
as for your link? you have to use their model no peaking at the source code. Microsoft for climate prediction anyone?
If we torture the data long enough, it will confess. (Ronald Coase, Nobel Prize for Economic Sciences, 1991)
New So run it against history.
Treat it as a black box. Does it do a reasonable job with the historical data or not?

http://www.grida.no/...c_tar/wg1/308.htm

If you really want it, the source is public domain - http://edgcm.columbi...port2/faq/#faq003

HTH.

Cheers,
Scott.
New thanx, downloaded will review
If we torture the data long enough, it will confess. (Ronald Coase, Nobel Prize for Economic Sciences, 1991)
     Economic theory is based on faulty mathematics. - (Another Scott) - (27)
         Economics is not sufficiently reality based . . . - (Andrew Grygus) - (3)
             Personally, I think that it depends on the economist's - (jake123) - (2)
                 too bad it only applies to economists not climatologists :-) -NT - (boxley) - (1)
                     That's why I pay attention when they say that - (jake123)
         That got complex *very* quickly. - (static)
         Appears to be - (beepster) - (21)
             I thought that might get a rise out of you. ;-) - (Another Scott) - (15)
                 hmm, Mises by the backdoor -NT - (boxley)
                 I know who he is... - (beepster) - (13)
                     I read it a little differently. - (Another Scott) - (12)
                         like I always said about climate models - (boxley) - (11)
                             The analogy is bad. - (Another Scott) - (10)
                                 What makes economics very different from physical sciences - (drook) - (6)
                                     welcome to quantum physics -NT - (boxley) - (5)
                                         That's not how quantum physics works. - (Another Scott) - (4)
                                             Re: That's not how quantum physics works. - (boxley) - (3)
                                                 Economics is not falsifiable -NT - (drook) - (1)
                                                     What? ever hear of ponzi? -NT - (boxley)
                                                 It's both. - (Another Scott)
                                 climatology isnt herd mentality? bwahahahaha - (boxley) - (2)
                                     So run it against history. - (Another Scott) - (1)
                                         thanx, downloaded will review -NT - (boxley)
             I don't think so - (drook)
             Re: Appears to be - (What-are-Dice?) - (3)
                 Welcome - (crazy)
                 Introduce yourself, please! - (folkert)
                 welcome to the non herd -NT - (boxley)

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