A real-time revolution will up-end the practice of macroeconomics
The pandemic has hastened a shift towards novel data and fast analysis
DOES ANYONE really understand what is going on in the world economy? The pandemic has made plenty of observers look clueless. Few predicted $80 oil, let alone fleets of container ships waiting outside Californian and Chinese ports. As covid-19 let rip in 2020, forecasters overestimated how high unemployment would be by the end of the year. Today prices are rising faster than expected and nobody is sure if inflation and wages will spiral upward. For all their equations and theories, economists are often fumbling in the dark, with too little information to pick the policies that would maximise jobs and growth.
This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Instant economics”
Leaders October 23rd 2021
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