Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Academic Snobbery?

A few weeks back I wrote about what I though was academic snobbery - I get a little agitated when I hear TV and radio interview "economists", who are commercial economists, employed by some company, rather than academic economists.

Over at Worthwhile Canadian Initiative Mike Moffatt has written on something very similar: The fact that non-economists perceive economists as being something they are not because of these guys that appear in the media and give black and white answers to questions which any serious economist knows have many shades of gray/grey.  Mike says that academic economists thus are not invited for these kinds of interviews because we don't give an exciting opinionated sound-bite.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Lack of Knowledge, or a Conspiracy?

So many papers I read, like this one, make the assertion that when we can't be sure about whether a data series is I(0) or I(1) (so stationary or non-stationary, integrated of order zero or one), it's ok because we can use the Pesaran, Shin and Smith (1999) approach and all is well.

Implicitly, then, according to these guys, the Johansen (1996) approach requires some previous knowledge about the level or integratedness of the time series.  Is this true?  Of course it's not.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

One Data Point, Exactly

I happen to have an old university friend who is a keen Austrian, in the economics sense.  Austrians appear to reject all forms of empirical investigation, and hence are unlikely to be the subject of warmth given my econometric standpoint.

They emphasise theoretical reasoning based on "self-evident" axioms, but also emphasise how complicated the world with terribly difficult to model human beings is, and hence how we cannot possibly hope to test any economic theory.  So they tell us how the world is, but aren't prepared to have their "self-evident" theories tested by real economic data.

They also appear to be generally libertarian in nature, and hence hold the price mechanism in the utmost regard: It can solve all problems.  Even where the price mechanism won't yield the optimal solution, it will still always yield a better solution than government intervention.

So this post on Cafe Hayek is particularly shocking on so many levels.  The author does make the point that one data point is not sufficient, and that's the point I should emphasise on the econometric sceptic blog.  But moreover, why is an Austrian defending a social democracy that has an extensive social safety net?

The defence though, against this assertion is simple: It's one data point, and you can't prove anything with one data point.

Am I an Academic Snob?

When listening to Radio 4 on the BBC driving into work, and when reading newspaper articles, I'm increasing noticing that when news sources interview economics, it is rarely the academic type they interview, usually the commercially employed ones, and I wonder why that is, and whether it's always been that way.  An example is in this article about the Bank of England where Simon Ward is called upon.

I often do get emails at work (university) about opportunities to talk to the press, but they aren't that frequent.  Maybe it's because my university is a provincial, non-London one?  Maybe London-based academic economists do get a lot more opportunities?

Or is it that commercially based economists are a different breed to us academics?  More happy to state their opinion, and happy to take strong positions?  Academic economists generally are more reserved types (I say generally, of course there are plenty of excepions like Andy Rose, Steve Levitt, Paul Krugman and Brad DeLong to name but a few) who will hedge their responses: The classic one-handed economist (on the one hand... but on the other hand...) is hard to find.

I don't know if I feel offended by this, but one thing I know is that the strong opinions expressed on the economy by more commercially based economists have a greater chance of being plain wrong than the more couched and qualified responses of your academic economist.  Of course, for the Torygraph, an academic economist is also probably far too left-wing to be considered...

What Can Be Learnt From Econometrics?

The title of this blog is, of course, somewhat arrogant.  It suggests the econometric method is superior to whatever economic theory can throw up.  It also suggests that my attempts at doing econometrics are superior to everyone else's.  Of course, I don't subscribe to either viewpoint.

However, I do have a high regard for econometrics.  I'm not a sceptic because, like commenters such as Falkenblog and his commenters, I have a low regard for econometrics and in fact regard economic theory more highly than econometrics.  It's probably also worth emphasising I'm not at all sympathetic to what is somewhat vaguely described as the Austrian School of Economics, the proponents of whom disregard all empirical analysis as valueless.

I see economic theory and econometrics as being complementary in learning more about the world around us.  Just as I create theories in my head about my everyday existence (my car can drive 500 miles without me refuelling), when I'm confronted with hard data, I'm forced to rethink.  I made 490 miles in the end before coming to a sticky end on the M42.

I think this is the least arrogant position.  It says: I don't know everything, it's very complicated out there.  I'll construct theories about the world, and I'll test them.  If the theories are rejected, I will probe how well the theories have been tested and if the testing passes muster, I'll reformulate the theory.

An attempt to post more regularly...

With the advent of Google Reader, I've become a much more avid reader of blogs.  I like to think it's keeping me up to date with what's relevant and interesting in the world out there, although I do worry it takes up a little too much of my time.

It turns out I also have a number of blogs myself, not least this one.  For some reason I'm not 100% sure about, I've tried to make this one an anonymous one, whereas I have my other teaching ones, and other previously aborted more generally attempts at blogging.

However, there gets to a point where I'm getting pretty tired of being a consumer and want to make my point in a better way than some small comment, probably missed, at the bottom of a blog post.

I'll never reach the prolificness of some bloggers (Matt Yglesias, Brad DeLong, etc), but I'd like to think one or two a week should suffice.  I'm about to write one of the few for this week now...