Mankiw's students want reality with their economics

Quote from DontMissTheBus:

Cool - so an astrophysicist is stupid to study planetary dynamics if he's never going to be an astronaut?

This board is clearly dominated by 12 year olds.


In the middle ages most scientists thought the earth was flat.

I think that's a good analogy for the study of economics today.

In order for the economy to grow they should....

To bring down unemployment they should...

Yadayada yada.

Whatever... get a real job...

:D
 
When you can't win an argument... drag out the middle ages....

You win. carry on.

Quote from Debaser82:

In the middle ages most scientists thought the earth was flat.

I think that's a good analogy for the study of economics today.

In order for the economy to grow they should....

To bring down unemployment they should...

Yadayada yada.

Whatever... get a real job...

:D
 
Quote from DontMissTheBus:

THANK YOU!



Congrats on passing econ 101; good luck with econ 201 - game theory is fun

seems like a wise ass remark for someone like you who got their astrology degree online.
 
Quote from DontMissTheBus:

Not outside of that the required humanities course that spent about half of its time on marxism (you are talking about the the Crisis Theory that's usually associated with marxist economic theories, right?)

Further, I'm going to guess you never got further in game theory than reading the wikipedia article on prisoner's dilemma and watching that russel crowe movie.

No. I studied it to a high level. Also crisis theory also relates to the short term issues raised in capitalism, when they artificially create problems with the business cycle.

I think this provided a good cross over Marxism/Austrian. The only thing they would agree on.
 
Quote from Covertibility:


Wait til they get to the crap about raising the minimum wage causes unemployment and companies can self regulate themselves, lol.

So price floors don't cause surpluses? Let's just set the minimum wage for unskilled labor at $1k/hr, a first step towards immanentizing the eschaton.

I guess I should have walked out of econ 101 as well.
 
Quote from joneog:

So price floors don't cause surpluses? Let's just set the minimum wage for unskilled labor at $1k/hr, a first step towards immanentizing the eschaton.

I guess I should have walked out of econ 101 as well.
min wage of 1k/hr would create problems and eventually everything would be just the same as it is now, but for a brief while, the little guy would make out very well. What other ideas do economists come up with that benefit the poor with such immediacy?

Borrowing money and giving it to the poor might trickle up and increase economic growth, but it would not be sustainable. What other ideas do people come up with that are sustainable?

My point is, we have one idea that would definitely help the poor and might help the economy. It's not even debatable. Everything else is just a theory that may or may not work and all of them will supposedly help the poor someday maybe.

So the students point may be, Econ 101 is not about helping the poor, and it should be.
 
Quote from oldtime:

min wage of 1k/hr would create problems and eventually everything would be just the same as it is now, but for a brief while, the little guy would make out very well. What other ideas do economists come up with that benefit the poor with such immediacy?

Borrowing money and giving it to the poor might trickle up and increase economic growth, but it would not be sustainable. What other ideas do people come up with that are sustainable?

My point is, we have one idea that would definitely help the poor and might help the economy. It's not even debatable. Everything else is just a theory that may or may not work and all of them will supposedly help the poor someday maybe.

So the students point may be, Econ 101 is not about helping the poor, and it should be.

Having seen, up close, what "helping the poor" leads to, I am not impressed.

Seems to me like Western civilization was in a definite uptrend from Greco-Roman times until "helping the poor" became an obsession among a certain class of pseudo-intellectuals. Since then, in Elliott Wave terms, the West is definitely in a "wave 2" down.
 
Quote from logic_man:

Having seen, up close, what "helping the poor" leads to, I am not impressed.

Seems to me like Western civilization was in a definite uptrend from Greco-Roman times until "helping the poor" became an obsession among a certain class of pseudo-intellectuals. Since then, in Elliott Wave terms, the West is definitely in a "wave 2" down.

helping 1 bank cost more than helping 1 million poor
 
Quote from dtan1e:

helping 1 bank cost more than helping 1 million poor

So? Helping neither of them costs nothing.

Best thing my parents ever taught me was that the world doesn't owe me anything. If it doesn't owe me anything, I have a hard time thinking it owes anyone else anything, either.
 
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