Oh gee you mean those numbers you get from Economists? You think they just come from a computer all neat and dandy? It's like you are saying you dont need a physicist, you'll just run your own Large Hadron Collider.
At least the physicists deliver and don't base the standard model off of a nationalistic, growth demanding, politically charged school of thought that has been mired deep in
at least one reign of tyranny (
and ironically killed off one of the more interesting developments in economic management).
Or hey, stable currency. It is vastly more stable now that we have economists managing the supply instead of monetizing gold. But who really cares if we have a depression every 15 years on average? That can't be important.
Oh please. Economic fluctuation is a reality of our system and it will never cease. All the postulating over gold or fiat didn't mean shit when Wall Street realized they could issue a million NINA loans, trade them in packages, and not suffer the fallout. Call me when economic management isn't just a functionary of generating dividends.
Oh, and fiat currency is madness. I understand it has benefits and that keeping with gold wasn't going to work, but fiat makes slinging debt around inevitable, and as the values continue to get more extreme the shell game is going to break down and we will all suffer the consequences. Value is arbitrary, sure, but as long as it's arbitrarily tied to something physical it can't exponentially expand as we've seen with fiat. Fiat currency is a time bomb.
Or how about the studies that have shown downward stickiness in individual employment situations leading to slight upward trends in prices even in a deflationary situation? I suppose you just as an average joe just intuitively knew what we economists just assumed due to political bias? I mean it's freaking obvious to any layman that tells us that core inflation metrics trending less then a percentage point below target probably indicate a larger output gap then Okun's law would typically indicate when long term interest rates are low. I mean, that's just common sense, right? I'm sure you know what that indicates about the opportunity cost of borrowing compared to a situation where wage deflation outweighs individual downward stickiness. Don't worry, it's only a question of three or four trillion dollars in importance.
Goddamn amateurs coming into my field and telling me I don't know anything.
I'm glad you're confident in your subject, but trying to smash me with out-of-field terminology isn't going to deter the very clear observation that economists are divorced from reality. Tell you what, I'll believe in economists when they aren't Reagan or Marx hot potato but actually impartial science that focuses on inquiry and progress independent of politics. And that's functionally, I'm sure there are dissidents to the Sacred Truth that I got a facefull of in my interdisciplinary work, but such dissidents rarely get their say in any field where this relationship exists. I'm not exactly holding my breath though, because the interplay of money and politics strangled all integrity out of this field long before I was around.