We can't spend -all- our time bashing economics as a discipline. :-)

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4 Politically Controversial Issues Where All Economists Agree - Megan McArdle - 
Business - The Atlantic
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2012/04/4-politically-controversial-issues-where-all-economists-agree/255600/

Adam Ozimek — blogger at Modeled Behavior and associate at Econsult Corporation

In reading the sometimes polarized debate in the economics blogosphere, the 
discipline often appears to suffer from an excess of disagreement and 
uncertainty. But this is more about the incentives economists face when writing 
and speaking in the public sphere than the actual state of knowledge in the 
field. In reality economists agree about a lot of things, and in many cases 
they do so with a high degree of certainty.

This fact is on display frequently at the IGM Economic Experts Panel from the 
University of Chicago. This is a panel of 41 of the worlds top economists who 
are offered statements about economic policy to which they can indicate whether 
they agree, disagree, or are uncertain. In addition they rate the certainty of 
their answer on a scale of 1 to 10, which allows the answers to be weighted. 
Over the past few months there have been several issues where this 
ideologically diverse group of economists have shown resounding unanimity. Some 
of these may surprise people, as it’s fairly obvious that public opinion would 
not side with economists with the same amount of unanimity. So here are a few 
things economists strongly agree on.

The benefits of free trade and NAFTA far outweigh the costs

None of the economists surveyed disagreed that the gains to freer trade are 
much larger than any costs. And only two economists even said that the answer 
is uncertain. In a space for additional comments, MIT’s Richard Schmalensee 
declared “If that’s not right, almost all of economics is wrong”.

Economists have emphasized the benefits of free trade for a long time, 
reflecting the field’s belief in the importance of specialization, comparative 
advantage, and gains from trade. Indeed, these results are similar to other 
surveys that show economists strongly supporting free trade.

So why do pundits and voters lag economists in supporting free trade? In his 
excellent book The Myth of the Rational Voter, Bryan Caplan provides evidence 
that people suffer from a handful of systematic biases that influence their 
beliefs, and three of these can help explain why voters are skeptical of trade: 
anti-market bias, anti-foreign bias, and pessimism bias.

Paul Krugman provides three reasons why intellectuals in particular resist the 
theory of comparative advantage that underpins free trade: 1) opposition to 
free trade is intellectually fashionable, 2) comparative advantage is hard to 
understand, and 3) they are averse to a fundamentally mathematical 
understanding of the world.

As is reflected in the comments by some of the panelists trade will create 
winners and losers, which may also explain some opposition to trade. But 
economists on the left and the right still struggle the understand the level of 
opposition to trade, and the rejection of the overall gains. Whatever their 
reasons for resisting, people should follow economists lead and embrace the 
fact that the gains from freer trade outweigh the costs.

Government policies don’t explain high gas prices

Individual’s beliefs about the extent to which the U.S. government should be 
blamed for high gas prices seems to have a strangely strong correlation with 
whether they like whoever happens to be in charge at the time. Economists on 
the other hand strongly reject the idea that the government has much affect on 
these prices. None of the surveyed economists disagreed with the following 
statement:

“Changes in U.S. gasoline prices over the past 10 years have predominantly been 
due to market factors rather than U.S. federal economic or energy policies.”

So why do people blame politicians when gas prices rise? Supply and demand, of 
course. Ideological pundits and politicians are happy to supply arguments 
blaming incumbent politicians, and ideological individuals are eager to believe 
them. People should set their ideologies aside and accept the sometimes 
inconvenient fact that market forces, not politicians, have been the primary 
driver of gas prices over the past 10 years.

The Stimulus and Bailouts Lowered the Unemployment Rate

Economists may differ on whether the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act was 
worth the cost overall, but they are in solid agreement that as of the end of 
2010 it lowered the unemployment rate. Very few disagreed with or were 
uncertain about this. In contrast, a significant number questioned whether the 
recovery act was worth the cost. Importantly, in the space for comments, 
Stanford’s Pete Klenow emphasized what Scott Sumner and others would say is the 
central issue: “how much was it offset by less aggressive (than otherwise) 
unconventional monetary policy?” But even stimulus skeptics should keep their 
criticisms in perspective: economists strongly reject the idea that stimulus is 
to blame for our economic woes.

In addition, economists strongly agree that the bank bailouts also lowered the 
unemployment rate. Of course as Austen Goolsbee commented: “the fact it was 
necessary doesn’t mean we should be happy about it.”

The Gold Standard is a Terrible Idea

This is an issue that has returned to a certain prominence in the last few 
years. But despite it’s popularity among some on the right — and Ron Paul fans 
in particular — economists overwhelmingly agree that the gold standard is a bad 
idea. In this sample of leading economists, 100% of disagreed with the claim 
that returning to a gold standard would improve price-stability or employment 
outcomes. Nobody even answered uncertain, because this question really isn’t up 
for debate anymore.

Some Other Things Economists Agree On

Rent control is bad, congestion pricing is good, eliminating tax deductions and 
lowering rates is efficient, and the tax deductibility of healthcare creates 
consequential distortions.

So economists can agree, and with a high degree of certainty. You just have to 
ask the right questions.

(via Instapaper)



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