|
|
|
|
|
by orijing
5512 days ago
|
|
That's a misconception. Real economics (stuff beyond the Macroeconomics 101 you took) is about data as much as any of the other hard sciences. Take a look at http://d2o7bfz2il9cb7.cloudfront.net/main-qimg-7395f945e270f... Economics PhD applicants score almost as high in the quantitative component of the GRE as their counterparts in mathematics and physics. That's because math and statistics are crucial to modern economics. That's why there's a whole field of statistics named after economics: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Econometrics |
|
Take minimum wage for example. This is a theory with supporters in both camps - some for, some against. Well, how can we ever measure if a minimum wage is having a positive influence? How can we continue in support of a theory with no supporting evidence? Pile on 500 more concurrent theories, and you have a cluster-fuck only Krugman could defend.