HomeNewsOpinionWhat economists got wrong about the great recession

What economists got wrong about the great recession

In general, we should be more modest about our ability to second-guess the market

October 25, 2023 / 15:00 IST
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Finance
Economists did make some mistakes on that one — but they are not the ones you usually hear about.

What do we know, and not know, about macroeconomics? My coauthor and I are currently revising our economics textbook — one of our decisions is to emphasize the Great Recession and the pandemic over the Great Depression — so I might be expected to have an answer to this question. Instead, standing on one foot, I would like to offer a short primer to guide us through future crises and downturns.

Let’s start with what we don’t know.

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Economists do not, in general, know when business downturns will arrive. If there were reliable signals of a coming downturn, it would arrive immediately, as market actors would contract their plans accordingly, in the expectation of bad times to come. In that sense, there is not much of a predictive window to experience.

That is not a failing of any particular economic theory. Rather, economics as a whole has figured out that expectations are so crucial that business cycles are intrinsically difficult to predict.