A little known fact about John Maynard Keynes, detailed in Jane Gleeson-White’s book “Double Entry” is that he was responsible for the development of national economic statistics and that he expected them to be aggregated only on a temporary basis.
It was being done for the war effort, and would, he reasoned, not be necessary afterwards. This certainly puts “Keynesianism” in a different perspective, and poses the intriguing question: where would we be without economic statistics?
The Economist recently had a leader “Don’t Lie to Me Argentina” in which it accused Argentina of some kind of unforgivable treachery for politicising its economic statistics. As if economic statistics aren’t political in their very nature (a heavy bias towards capital and against labour, for instance).
So in contrast to H&H, who enthuses that without economic data we are “naked, bereft of meaning” I wish to present a very different perspective. I wish to briefly examine what it would mean not to have economic statistics. Here are a few implications, I submit:
Read more: http://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2012/03/economy-adrift-in-sea-economic-data/
It was being done for the war effort, and would, he reasoned, not be necessary afterwards. This certainly puts “Keynesianism” in a different perspective, and poses the intriguing question: where would we be without economic statistics?
The Economist recently had a leader “Don’t Lie to Me Argentina” in which it accused Argentina of some kind of unforgivable treachery for politicising its economic statistics. As if economic statistics aren’t political in their very nature (a heavy bias towards capital and against labour, for instance).
So in contrast to H&H, who enthuses that without economic data we are “naked, bereft of meaning” I wish to present a very different perspective. I wish to briefly examine what it would mean not to have economic statistics. Here are a few implications, I submit:
Read more: http://www.macrobusiness.com.au/2012/03/economy-adrift-in-sea-economic-data/
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