Laurent Guerby writes:

>> Why do you think economists are devoted to understanding our economy?
>> 
>> If they're rational and smart they know that economics has no
>> predictive power whatsoever so they will instead sell their current
>> influence on politicians to interest groups who pay the highest price.

Why do you think individuals go into academia and spend their time on a topic 
creating models, teaching undergraduates, writing articles?  I have the feeling 
that you (and others on this list) are buying into the notion that people who 
advocate ideas they agree with have good motivations and people who advocate 
ideas they disagree with have bad motivations.  I believe such assumptions are 
a fallacy.

>> 
>> > why do we think a few dozen government officials could do any
>> > better?
>> 
>> Overall government official incentives are less skewed than economists
>> incentives, so more of them will have some care for the general
>> interest.

I truly believe there is no theoretical or empirical support for your statement 
and it is entirely counterintuitive.  If the goal is truth or even the "general 
interest", why would an academic, protected by academic freedom with no 
pecuniary or other interest in the outcome of a prediction, have worse 
incentives than a government official, who is subject to the multitude of 
competing political interests?

David Shemano

_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to