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by pessimizer
4676 days ago
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It's very difficult for me to figure out what you're trying to say here. The first graph seems to be about Obama, the second a time series of the monetary base, and the link in the footnote long statements from random people. Only the last mentions a model, and only in terms of how well it worked[1]. >Given that people who think differently from you invented Bitcoin (and thus have at least a glancing familiarity with advanced mathematics, if the solution of the Byzantine Generals problem means anything) it would be great to see some plots to the contrary. I don't know what Bitcoin has do do with anything, or what it is being presented as an example of. >Not just models, but X/Y plots or tables in which Keynesians predict something and nail it. You're the first person to mention Keynesians, I mentioned economists. If you want to find something that Krugman nailed, though, try the unemployment rate from your first graph. [1] http://fraser.stlouisfed.org/docs/meltzer/fisdeb33.pdf |
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So: what "very old" models performed "very well"? You must be thinking of something here. I'm not talking about a Krugman blog post where he says the stimulus was too small. I'm talking about an actual scatterplot, a time series prediction with the X axis as time, the Y axis as the dependent variable, and actual empirical measurements plotted vs. the predictions of theory.
Here is another example from a different field:
http://www.nature.com/news/climate-change-the-forecast-for-2...
http://www.nature.com/news/499139a-i2-0-jpg-7.11335?article=...
You can see the graph halfway down the page, with theoretical predictions as the red line and actual empirical measurements as the black line. The Nature article admits they don't match well. But in other fields they do match well. For example:
http://physics.info/projectiles/practice.shtml
In ballistics the predicted time series match experimental results very closely. So I ask again: what "very well established models" in economics performed "very well"? Which of them nailed the curve?