Matthew
7: 15 “Watch out for false prophets. They come to you in sheep’s clothing,
but inwardly they are ferocious wolves. 16 By their fruit you will recognize
them.
Divination is the attempt
to gain insight into a question or situation by way of an occultic, standardized
process or ritual.
A charlatan (also called
swindler or mountebank) is a person practising quackery or some similar
confidence trick in order to obtain money, fame or other advantages via some
form of pretense or deception.
“We really can’t forecast all that
well, and yet we pretend that we can, but we really can’t.”
That last one is courtesy of Alan Greenspan, and it comes
from John Mauldin’s recent Thoughts from
the Frontline, entitled Economicus
Terra Incognita.
Actually, I’m going to spend the
first few pages demonstrating that the mathematical models used to forecast GDP
and all sorts of interesting economic events are basically nonsense.
That’s very Austrian of
you, John.
He begins with a look at the professionals who forecast
returns of the stock market, in this case the S&P 500:
Housel calculates that the
strategists’ forecasts were off by an average 14.7 percentage points per
year. His Blind Forecaster, who simply
assumed 9% gains every year, was off by an average 14.1 percentage points per
year. Thus the Blind Forecaster beat the
experts even if you exclude 2008 as an unforeseeable “black swan” year.
So why do people listen to any of these knuckleheads? An answer is offered via the aforementioned Morgan
Housel:
I think there’s a burning desire to
think of finance as a science like physics or engineering….Finance is much
closer to something like sociology. It's barely a science, and driven by
irrational, uninformed, emotional, vengeful, gullible, and hormonal human
brains.
What about the Federal Reserve?
A 2015 study by Kevin J. Lansing
and Benjamin Pyle of the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank found the FOMC was
persistently too optimistic about future US economic growth. They concluded:
Over the past seven years, many
growth forecasts, including the SEP’s central tendency midpoint, have been too
optimistic. In particular, the SEP midpoint forecast
(1) did not anticipate the Great
Recession that started in December 2007,
(2) underestimated the severity of
the downturn once it began, and
(3) consistently overpredicted the
speed of the recovery that started in June 2009.
Of course, forecasting GDP is a waste of time in the first
place:
One problem here is that GDP itself
is a political construction. Forecasting the future is hard enough when you actually
understand what you are forecasting. What happens when the yardstick itself
keeps changing shape? You get meaningless forecasts. But this doesn’t stop the
Fed from trying.
Of course not. If
they did, what would happen to the value of a Ph.D in Economics?
How about the Congressional Budget Office?
The Congressional Budget Office
issues forecasts much as the Federal Reserve does. And like the Fed, the CBO
grades itself. You can see for yourself in “CBO’s Economic Forecasting
Record:2015 Update.”
Read that document, and you will
find the CBO readily admitting that its forecasts bear little resemblance to
reality. Their main defense, or maybe I should say excuse, is that the
executive branch and private forecasters are even worse.
Mauldin then references something he wrote on this topic
three years ago:
If you've suspected all along that
economists are useless at the job of forecasting, you would be right. Dozens of
studies show that economists are completely incapable of forecasting
recessions. But forget forecasting. What's worse is that they fail miserably
even at understanding where the economy is today. In one of the broadest
studies of whether economists can predict recessions and financial crises,
Prakash Loungani of the International Monetary Fund wrote very starkly,
"The record of failure to predict recessions is virtually
unblemished."
Tough to engineer a “soft landing” if you don’t even know
that you are losing altitude.
Returning to the present day:
Central banks tell us that they
know when to raise or lower rates, when to resort to quantitative easing, when
to end the current policies of financial repression, and when to shrink the
bloated monetary base. However, given their record at forecasting, how will they know?
John, you have already answered this question. I am sure you do not need me to point it out.
OK, I will. They
won’t know.
The central banks tell us their
policies are data-dependent, but then they use that data to create models that
are patently wrong time and time again.
Economists do not measure what is important because it
cannot be measured; they measure what they can although it is relatively
unimportant. This is the quality of the
data on which economists are dependent.
Trusting central bankers now,
whether in the US, Europe, or elsewhere, is a dicey wager, given their track
record.
It most certainly is not a dicey wager; it is a certain
wager – certain to be wrong.
The reason is that they base their
models on flawed economic theories that can only represent at most a pale
shadow of the true economy.
The “true economy” cannot be measured, and certainly cannot
be forecast. The “true economy” is made
up of 7 billion individual actors, each making numerous decisions every day, each
with his own subjective value scale – all complicated by the fact that
subjective value is not objective; it cannot be measured.
What does Mauldin suggest?
Better models…I’m not kidding:
If I were a young and
mathematically gifted economist, I think I would explore the use of complexity
theory to model the economy, based not on Keynesian nonsense or the hubristic
assumption that an economy can ever be in a state of equilibrium (it can’t),
but using Claude Shannon’s information theory instead as a better way to
demonstrate how economics works in the real world (an idea brilliantly
suggested by George Gilder in Knowledge and Power).
What is Claude Shannon’s information theory?
Information theory is a branch of applied mathematics, electrical engineering,
and computer science involving the quantification of information.
Information theory was developed by Claude E. Shannon to find fundamental
limits on signal processing operations
such as compressing data and on
reliably storing and communicating data.
Since its inception, based on a landmark 1948 paper by Shannon, it has
broadened to find applications in many other areas, including statistical inference, natural language
processing, cryptography, neurobiology, the evolution and function of molecular
codes, model selection in ecology, thermal physics, quantum computing,
linguistics, plagiarism detection, pattern recognition, anomaly detection and
other forms of data analysis. (Emphasis added)
John, you can’t be serious.
Go back and read what you wrote about Morgan Housel: economics is a
social science, not a physical science.
Human action cannot be measured in such a manner such that it can be
modeled. I do not even know what decisions
I will make tomorrow. How can Claude
Shannon know?
Mauldin then proceeds to offer his forecast. Despite all of his earlier commentary and
analysis, he offers a reason as to why:
This is the typically the most
forwarded letter of the year.
Consider: if you told an economist to model the demand for a
good that proved to be wrong 100 times out of 100, he would tell you the demand
would approach zero.
And that would be one more incorrect model by and economist,
apparently.
End the Fed.
"Human action cannot be measured in such a manner such that it can be modeled. "
ReplyDeleteProvided an individual has, and is content with, a properly diversified, long term savings plan that makes modest profits in all broadly defined economic conditions [eg inflation, deflation, good times, recessions], there is no need for that individual to ever have to try to predict future economic events, nor for them to listen to or rely on the "expert investment/economic advice" of anyone who claims predictive powers.
But, of course, most investors still do exactly that, simply because they mistakenly believe that the "experts"[ however defined, but including many "Austrians"], _can_ reliably predict our economic future.
And so it goes :-) .
http://onebornfreesfinancialsafetyreports.blogspot.com/2014/09/long-term-savings-plan-results-update.html
Regards, onebornfree
Financial Safety Services
What Shannon cared about was how to handle situations where we do not have sufficient information. With the aim to extract as much information as one can from what is known. So, in itself not a bad idea to try to apply it in economics.
ReplyDeleteHow can anyone ever think about using mathematics in the absence of a stable, uniform unit of measurement? Imagine if physicists had to make a rocket reach escape velocity when the meter kept changing in size. Economics is the study of human decision making in allocating scarce resources to maximize *satisfaction*. What is the unit of measure here? There isn't one!
ReplyDeleteThese people deal with money, and assume that a dollar spent is somehow guaranteed to produce satisfaction. Not surprisingly, then, they always call for more dollars to be spent! And since the government is the single biggest spender/waster of money in any economy, they always call for more gov't spending.
Igor Karbinovskiy
The operation was a success! The patient died, but...
ReplyDelete