Quote from Martinghoul:
Yeah, but that's the thing... The process of understanding the world around us often starts with stuff that appears like real quackery. My favorite example of this phenomenon is J.J. Thompson's "plum pudding model" of the atom. Sure, it's been shown to be pretty much all wrong, but one could imagine that it paved the way for things that eventually were shown to make sense.
As far as I can tell all significant theoretical discoveries regarding macroeconomic and monetary affairs had already been realized by about 1930. Almost everything since has consisted of pro-interventionist propaganda, or been a matter of replacing good theory with bad psuedoscience so its practitioners can make a name for themselves, secure cushy tenured university positions and NYT op-ed columns, etc.
These days the economics profession is bought and paid for by the Fed. The real goal of its output (and also that of the grand viziers at the Fed itself) is to justify the central bank's existence, and more broadly the whole psuedo-scientific edifice that's been constructed over the past fifty-sixty years. Anything else is really just incidental.