it totally is that, it feels completely irrational and panicky.
maths was a weird one, i ended up with an A at A-level without ever really understanding it (and at intervals this blew up into freakouts that my #chinesetigermother remedied with EXTRA TUITION) - the big exception was algebra which i clicked with right from the start and never felt uncomfortable with right up to A-level pure maths.
i'm not that comfortable with diagrams or models, they feel like simplified metaphors that disguise the ACTUAL THING from being understood (i don't know what this ACTUAL THING is w/r/t economics, at all)
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:27 (fourteen years ago)
i somewhat agree that metaphors for economics are a problem, actually: the way money works is not "like" other things, and you have to get a grip on its own models -- or better still competing systems of models -- to grasp why not :(
and that galbraith piece is not AT ALL entry-level: it assumes a lot of prior knowledge of terms, and intuited effects (right and wrong), and a working knowledge of US politics (the last you probably have)
― mark s, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:28 (fourteen years ago)
haha bad association, yeah well my year studying economics at oxford was a disaster (jesus i still can't believe i received such useless tuition at a supposedly elite institution)
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:29 (fourteen years ago)
One of the things that is frustrating in political discussion re:economics is the reification of "the deficit" as this thing which must be appeased at all costs, plus the fact that money is created in the form of debt so paying off debt would remove money from circulation which would cause huge deflation, no?
yet "we cannot continue to spend what we haven't earned" continues as a thing, when surely the opposite is true - capitalism requires we spend what we haven't earned yet
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Grip-Death-Slavery-Destructive-Economics/dp/1897766408
Despite the rather lurid title this is a readable and interesting book - esp re:debt - interested in others views on it if they have read
― lake, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:33 (fourteen years ago)
This is a very well written and very concise primer, I highly recommend it.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Concise-Guide-Macroeconomics-Managers-Executives/dp/1422101797/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1313584460&sr=1-1
― American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:35 (fourteen years ago)
the reification of "the deficit" as this thing which must be appeased at all costs
one of the reasons i feel i can't argue fully about ~our current politics~ is that i have no idea how scary the deficit is, or should be, and i assume everyone on both sides is just lying
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:35 (fourteen years ago)
lex this is a pretty great little film about debt and modern economics. if you have 45 mins available at some point i really recommend it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dc3sKwwAaCU
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:36 (fourteen years ago)
my maths experience was similar: i can be taught to deploy any set of formulae and system of rules of deployment, and get excellent marks -- i actually associate this with my skill at proofreading, it's a mix of excellent visual memory and conentrated precision -- but i never felt i "understood" anything after calculus
it was only once i was teaching maths to 13-yr-olds that i began to realise this is what "understanding" maths pretty much is: there is no ultimate there there to be touched or tasted or smelt, and people who "get it" just have a far wider palette of techniques of rival systems of models they can bring into play, and plus an intuitive sense of where "likeness" operates (as in, this model is "like the situation" bcz x, that model is "not like the situation" bcz y)
x-post: absolutely re reification, it's the curse of the discipline in ANY of its political forms
― mark s, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:36 (fourteen years ago)
ed that is one of the actual textbooks we used at oxford! it...got me nowhere :(
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:36 (fourteen years ago)
[one of the reasons i feel i can't argue fully about ~our current politics~ is that i have no idea how scary the deficit is, or should be, and i assume everyone on both sides is just lying
― lex pretend, Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Want to read more here about Andrew Jackson and 1837 - when the US actually paid off its debt (for the only time in history?) - and what followed wasn't so good, right?
― lake, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:40 (fourteen years ago)
but not sure what the best thing to read on that is!
― lake, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:41 (fourteen years ago)
i can be taught to deploy any set of formulae and system of rules of deployment, and get excellent marks
where this led to freakouts was when this suddenly stopped being true and this cruise control mode, like, crashed into a tree - it felt like there was no "deeper understanding" to fall back on and work things out logically when things went wrong because i hadn't been doing that anyway.
there is no ultimate there there to be touched or tasted or smelt
hmmmmmm i think this makes it less likely that i'll understand economics but more likely that i won't feel bad about it
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:42 (fourteen years ago)
i was recently recommended "finance: plain and simple -- what you need to know to make better financial decisions" by sebastian nokes, which was said to cut through a lot of the jargon-y bullshit (it's aimed at small business-y people intimidated to financial advisor types), and to lay out a lot of "what they're actually saying" versus "what they're disguising and obfuscating")
however, since i bought it my time and focus have not exactly been my own, w/martin, and w/riots, and w/a vital life-changing career interview next week (if i don't make a fool of myself and no one else is better), so i have barely started it
― mark s, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:44 (fourteen years ago)
yes i didn't get freak-outs, i just gradually lost interest in pursuing it at university level (haha bcz CORRECT CHEATS not HANDED ME ON A PLATE i suspect): twice i got excellent marks on a paper by spending the days before frantically memorising formulae and proofs in an area new to me, and just as quickly forgetting everything i'd absorbed after the exam was over
― mark s, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:47 (fourteen years ago)
I hate the term "fiat money"
xpost to hand's video
― American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:48 (fourteen years ago)
yah seriously.
― caek, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:51 (fourteen years ago)
not surprised to see sanpaku use it tbh.
Ed yes that video has a suspicious goldbuggist undercurrent to it, but I think it does a good job making sense of things
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:56 (fourteen years ago)
agreed. I prefer "unit of exchanged" or "shared fiction" to "fiat money". Money only has value with the content of the people, otherwise they stick it in Gold or other assets.
― American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 12:58 (fourteen years ago)
...
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 13:00 (fourteen years ago)
what on earth does that mean?
http://www.threadbombing.com/data/media/2/paulownsmccain.gif
― caek, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 13:21 (fourteen years ago)
i don't entire understand ed's second sentence either: does "content" mean "that which is contained" or "happy approval" -- it's true that value requires a big element of agreement, including the explicit agreement to agree, but it also includes necessarily disagreement -- if people didn't want things in different degree, "they" (ie we) wouldn't need to explore systems of exchange, and ways to stabilise how these exchange rates operate (should a beer costs more than a potato etc), and also to render them fluid when needed too
i think it means: when everyone is too anxious to negotiate about value in good faith, relative to their immediate situation, on an assumption of shared givens and (moral) values, they flee to hoarded piles of value-that-never-changes (which gold has long been a symbol of): but actually its value does change, so this is a phantom
actually most of the issues we face relate ultimately to predictions made -- and how they get made -- about what people WILL want: and how to facilitate, or indeed not facilitate, this
― mark s, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 13:23 (fourteen years ago)
haha we are all mccain now :\
― mark s, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 13:24 (fourteen years ago)
i think it's a typo and he means "consent".
basically people who aren't comfortable using "fiat money" and "money" as synonyms tend to be nuts.
― caek, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 13:25 (fourteen years ago)
WRT the OP, I started the last decade largely ignorant of academic economics, but made my way through a std text (samuelson?) with the aid of Steve Keen's Debunking Economics. Being aware of the numerous unjustified assumptions behind neoclassical microeconomics will make the parlous state of mathematical econ as a predictive tool evident.
On a similar debunking note, I've just started Ian Fletcher's Free Trade Doesn't Work: What Should Replace It and Why, which, while a serious work for laymen by a proper academic, is just $0.99 on Kindle.
― der dukatenscheisser (Sanpaku), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 13:28 (fourteen years ago)
lex, galbraith's more famous dad has written some very accessible books about modern economics which are actually great fun to read. The Affluent Society is probably my favorite but there's also The Great Crash, about 1929.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Affluent-Society-Updated-Introduction-Business/dp/0140285199
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 13:33 (fourteen years ago)
"Money: whence it came and where it went" <-- best title evah, and jgk is an extremely funny writer, but i still think you have to be ready with a notepad to look stuff up quite often (and be aware that there's a reason such a lucid writer stopped being someone mainstream economists read and believed)
(i'd say that reason isn't that he was wrong; but THEY would -- and the technicalities of this disagreement have to be understood, as well as the politics)
― mark s, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 13:38 (fourteen years ago)
Attempting to explain the causes of the financial crisis to the Lex in the pub was really frustrating but also illuminating because he kept asking really pertinent questions like "why were they doing that? Isn't that really stupid? What happens when these people can't pay?". Clearly knowing nothing about the subject is an advantage.
― Matt DC, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 13:59 (fourteen years ago)
nothing wrong w/ a neophyte asking neophyte questions. esp. since the folks "knowledgeable" about economics are the ones who got us into the economic pickle we're in and are incapable of getting us out of it.
i'd recommend an Intro to Econ. textbook -- Samuelson and Nordhaus was standard when i was an undergrad during the late 80s/early 90s, so if they still use that that would be the one i'd get. also, seek out robert heilbroner's the worldly philosophers for a readable synopsis of economists from Adam Smith up to John Maynard Keynes.
― Friedrich das Wunderhahn hat den traurigen Clownporn sehr gern (Eisbaer), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 14:36 (fourteen years ago)
heilbroner's book is devoid of math, BTW, if anyone has a phobia about math in economics.
― Friedrich das Wunderhahn hat den traurigen Clownporn sehr gern (Eisbaer), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 14:38 (fourteen years ago)
tad llamasfur! you said exactly the same eight years ago on this very thread
― mark s, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 14:39 (fourteen years ago)
it's still true, though!!
heilbroner book has nothing to say about Milton Friedman, rational expectations or neo-Keynesianism though.
― Friedrich das Wunderhahn hat den traurigen Clownporn sehr gern (Eisbaer), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 14:40 (fourteen years ago)
If we're posting videos, Chris Martenson's 3 hour Crash Course is a useful primer on the absurdity of limitless economic growth on a finite planet.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnXZzx9pAmQ
― der dukatenscheisser (Sanpaku), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 14:45 (fourteen years ago)
I've seen that before, its a good video
― lake, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 15:09 (fourteen years ago)
oh wait that might be something else
Chris Martenson, or Chris Martenson PhD as he prefers to be known, seems like a crank tbh. this from his about page...
First of all, I am not an economist. I am trained as a scientist, having completed both a PhD and a post-doctoral program at Duke University, where I specialized in neurotoxicology. I tell you this because my extensive training as a scientist informs and guides how I think. I gather data, I develop hypotheses, and I continually seek to accept or reject my hypotheses based on the evidence at hand. I let the data tell me the story.
is the classic "now i admit i have no training in this area in this but i am better than all the experts and here's why" flase humility of the crank.
but regardless of that, and FAO lex, neo-malthusianism is really not a good place to start for someone to learn about macroeconomics.
― caek, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 15:24 (fourteen years ago)
lol "fiat currency"
― max, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 15:25 (fourteen years ago)
seriously.
― caek, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 15:26 (fourteen years ago)
i'm a non-expert in economics, too. but i have some knowledge of crackpots ... and very strong evidence that one is dealing with a crackpot is when one encounters someone ranting about "fiat money."
― Friedrich das Wunderhahn hat den traurigen Clownporn sehr gern (Eisbaer), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 15:28 (fourteen years ago)
if youre only interested in economics as it pertains to policy why not just find a couple of good economic/policy blogs whose writing you like and just follow along? over time im sure youd get enough of the 'basics' to achieve something like fluency imo w/o having to try to 'get' models and most of those dudes are p good about linking stuff for further/deeper reading
― Monstrous TumTum (Lamp), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 15:34 (fourteen years ago)
fiat money is the new pimp towncar
― 10/11 of a dead jesus (darraghmac), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 15:40 (fourteen years ago)
fiat money cars look like something out of a 1950s Fellini movie ...
http://www.philseed.com/images/fiat-600-1956.jpg
― Friedrich das Wunderhahn hat den traurigen Clownporn sehr gern (Eisbaer), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 15:42 (fourteen years ago)
Criticism noted. I still think Martenson is OTM WRT resource constraints being the most important economic change for the rest of our lifetimes. Even The Economist is hedging here.
what if Mr Ehrlich had taken up Mr Simon’s 1990 offer to go “double or quits” for any future date? All five have risen in price since the rematch was proposed. Furthermore, Jeremy Grantham of GMO, a fund-management group, points out that Mr Ehrlich would have won the original bet were it recalculated today (he is still alive; Mr Simon died in 1998). An equally weighted portfolio of the five commodities is now higher in real terms than the average of their prices back in 1980 (see chart).The Cornucopians might argue that today’s metals prices are due to the buoyancy of demand in the developing world rather than any cataclysmic shortages in supply. But the Malthusians might retort that man’s famed ingenuity has not stopped prices from rising in real terms over an extended period. Place your bets.
The Cornucopians might argue that today’s metals prices are due to the buoyancy of demand in the developing world rather than any cataclysmic shortages in supply. But the Malthusians might retort that man’s famed ingenuity has not stopped prices from rising in real terms over an extended period. Place your bets.
― der dukatenscheisser (Sanpaku), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 15:45 (fourteen years ago)
i don't think you have to be a malthusian to argue that the standard "growth model" of constant 3% year-on-year increases in output is unsustainable
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 15:49 (fourteen years ago)
Thermodynamics indicates our skin will boil in about 400 years at just 2.3% growth.
Also, FWIW, I'm amused that Morgan Stanley's economics dept under Stephen Roach requires new hires to have spent at least 3 years in the real world to help overcome academic "brainwashing".
― der dukatenscheisser (Sanpaku), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 15:55 (fourteen years ago)
economics - where to end?
― Monstrous TumTum (Lamp), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 15:57 (fourteen years ago)
if youre only interested in economics as it pertains to policy why not just find a couple of good economic/policy blogs whose writing you like and just follow along?
because i don't understand them! the "basics" have eluded me over a decade of trying, including a year spent studying them at oxford. i think part of the reason is that i'm not very trusting of what i read, and i can't take ANY economics specialist at face value because they all argue opposite things. how the fuck do i know which ones are right?
i'm appreciative of all the book suggestions but i think at this point some actual hand-holding is required. let's just take the opening para of the galbraith article
In early January 2009 two White House-bound economists — Christina Romer and Jared Bernstein — predicted that if the stimulus bill were passed, unemployment would peak at 8% by midyear and then start coming down. If there were no stimulus, they said, joblessness might hit 9% and not peak until 2010.
- what actually is a stimulus? is it printing more money? if it's so helpful why don't we do it all the time? if it's so helpful why wait til now to do it? surely printing more money devalues the currency? I DON'T UNDERSTAND
- why is it helpful? why would it stop unemployment? why didn't it? are the 8% and 9% figures plucked out of thin air? given that those figures are apparently wrong, might they as well have been plucked out of thin air? why did anyone believe them in the first place?
― lex pretend, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 16:03 (fourteen years ago)
"fiscal stimulus" means the government spending money in an effort to get people working and to get money flowing around the economy (because those newly hired people are now making wages and will spend that money in stores. there is a knock-on effect also: when those newly employed people spend money they will also be paying taxes on it, which allows the govt to make some of its money back.)
if it's so helpful why don't we do it all the time?
good question. short answer is that governments are already overloaded in debt.
the 8% and 9% figures were guesses based on past recoveries. people believed them because past recoveries made those number seem sensible. the main point galbraith is making in this article is that this recession is not like past recessions, so those predictions didn't pan out.
― TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Wednesday, 17 August 2011 16:11 (fourteen years ago)
A stimulus is anything that might stimulate economic growth, so yeah it might be printing more money or it might be tax cuts or it might be an increase in public spending.
surely printing more money devalues the currency?
You don't literally print money, central banks will put more money into the financial system that can be borrowed by other banks and used to free up the amount of money they can use for other things. This may or may not lead to inflation and devaluation of currency, but economists are divided on whether or not that's actually the case.
Any stimulus that leads to economic growth should, theoretically, lead to increased business confidence and increased consumer confidence, "we're coming out of a recession" etc. So businesses are more likely to invest and employ people. Doesn't always work out that way.
are the 8% and 9% figures plucked out of thin air? given that those figures are apparently wrong, might they as well have been plucked out of thin air? why did anyone believe them in the first place?
Part of the problem is that economics isn't an exact science but people act like it is.
― Matt DC, Wednesday, 17 August 2011 16:11 (fourteen years ago)