GeistHaus
log in · sign up

Real-World Economics Review Blog

Part of wordpress.com

Posts are by authors of papers published in the RWER. Anyone may comment.

stories
Weekend read – Who is Neil Lawrence? Or AI and Gardening
Uncategorized
from Peter Radford Who is Neil Lawrence? Why do I ask? The Financial Tims published a letter he wrote in which he directs us to the real value in artificial intelligence.  It will not be sourced through some centrally orchestrated “grand plan” that investors in various AI businesses can more readily put a value on.  […]
peterradford
http://rwer.wordpress.com/?p=47279
Extensions
How economics became a religion
Uncategorized
from Lars Syll Economics today has — as we all know — become a ‘the model is the message’ discipline. However, as long as it does not seriously examine and evaluate the compatibility between the models and their real‑world target systems, the belief that these models significantly improve our ability to understand or explain what […]
lulapa
Science religion relationship sign Stock Photo by ©kikkerdirk 96770664
http://rwer.wordpress.com/?p=47264
Extensions
What is to be done?
Uncategorized
Source
Editor
http://rwer.wordpress.com/?p=47272
Extensions
Robert Solow kicking Lucas and Sargent in the pants
Uncategorized
from Lars Syll The purported strength of New Classical macroeconomics is that it has firm anchorage in preference-based microeconomics, and especially the decisions taken by inter-temporal utility maximising ‘forward-looking’ individuals. To some of us, however, this has come at too high a price. The almost quasi-religious insistence that macroeconomics has to have microfoundations — without […]
lulapa
4703325
http://rwer.wordpress.com/?p=47257
Extensions
AI productivity boom and shorter workweeks
Uncategorizedaiartificial-intelligenceEconomicsPoliticstechnology
from Dean Baker Productivity growth is an old concept; we’ve been seeing it at a substantial pace for more than 200 years. Nonetheless, many elite intellectual types like to claim they know nothing about it when they talk about AI. It’s far from clear how much of a productivity boom we will see with AI. […]
deanbaker1
http://rwer.wordpress.com/?p=47253
Extensions
Will gravity pull down the AI bubble?
Uncategorizedaiartificial-intelligencefinanceinvestingtechnology
from Dean Baker I have written before on the AI bubble. The stock valuations we are seeing now look a lot like the valuations we saw before the Internet bubble began to crash in 2000. Even a quarter century later, people miss much of the story of that bubble. It’s true we had companies that never made […]
deanbaker1
http://rwer.wordpress.com/?p=47250
Extensions
Why we are heading for another financial crash
UncategorizedEconomicsEconomyfinanceinvestingmoney
from Lars Syll The recurring pattern in financial crises is broadly the same. For one reason or another, a shift occurs in the economic cycle — such as war, innovation, or new regulation — which alters profit opportunities for banks and firms. Demand and prices rise, drawing ever larger parts of the economy into a […]
lulapa
Theories of Economic Crises | Institute for New Economic Thinking
The “Minsky Moment” Drags On: The Financial Instability Hypothesis
http://rwer.wordpress.com/?p=47246
Extensions
We don’t need billionaires, and we can structure the market so we don’t have them
UncategorizedEconomicshistorymarxismphilosophyPolitics
from Dean Baker The Economist gave us a classically sloppy piece last week, telling us that we need the mega-wealthy types like Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg.  The argument is largely tautological.  It points out that the mega-rich have been responsible for the diffusion of important technologies. There is considerable truth to that, but this is because we […]
deanbaker1
http://rwer.wordpress.com/?p=47233
Extensions
Rational expectations — a fallacy that matters for economics
UncategorizedaiconsciousnessEconomicsphilosophytechnology
from Lars Syll For more than 20 years, economists were enthralled by so-called “rational expectations” models … That such models prevailed bears testimony to a triumph of ideology over science … Good science recognises its limitations, but the prophets of rational expectations have usually shown no such modesty. Joseph Stiglitz The rational expectations hypothesis presupposes […]
lulapa
Rational expectations' — nonsense on stilts | Real-World Economics Review  Blog
http://rwer.wordpress.com/?p=47228
Extensions