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Machine Learning Could Solve Economists' Math Problem 157

An anonymous reader writes: Noah Smith argues that the field of economics frequently uses math in an unhealthy way. He says many economists don't use math as a tool to describe reality, but rather as an abstract foundation for whatever theory they've come up with. A possible solution to this, he says, is machine learning: "In other words, econ is now a rogue branch of applied math. Developed without access to good data, it evolved different scientific values and conventions. But this is changing fast, as information technology and the computer revolution have furnished economists with mountains of data. As a result, empirical analysis is coming to dominate econ. ... [Two economists pushing this change] stated that machine learning techniques emphasized causality less than traditional economic statistical techniques, or what's usually known as econometrics. In other words, machine learning is more about forecasting than about understanding the effects of policy. That would make the techniques less interesting to many economists, who are usually more concerned about giving policy recommendations than in making forecasts."
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Machine Learning Could Solve Economists' Math Problem

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  • Same issues (Score:2, Insightful)

    by milgram ( 104453 )

    Isn't this the same as having economists doing the work, just faster? You are still using past data to predict the future,

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by nitehawk214 ( 222219 )

      No, because most of economics was not scientific. Economists would get a "feeling" of how it should be, then fudge the numbers to prove their theories.

      • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

        Economics is not scientific in the mathematical sense. It takes no account of the irrational human animal. That is why it is more like the weather than mathematics. You will learn more about real economics from Freud than from Friedman.

        • Re:Same issues (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Coisiche ( 2000870 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @10:54AM (#50444351)

          It takes no account of the irrational human animal.

          Quite the contrary; there are a few economic think tanks around that take plenty account of that and "tailor" (is "completely fabricate" too judgemental?) data to totally agree with the political stance of their primary benefactors.

          • by jafac ( 1449 )

            Couple this with the fact that as a rule, Economists do NOT cite employment relationships when publishing papers. In any other scientific field, this would be considered an ethical conflict of interest. In Economics, it's just standard practice.

            http://www.slate.com/articles/... [slate.com]

            The fact that Economists are actually taken seriously in guidance of national and world economic policy, should be of major concern, because it has had absolutely DIRE consequences for general economic prosperity and stability, and h

        • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @11:32AM (#50444667)

          Economics is not scientific in the mathematical sense. It takes no account of the irrational human animal.

          That's entirely and demonstrably untrue. In 2002 the Nobel prize was awarded to Daniel Kahneman "for having integrated insights from psychological research into economic science, especially concerning human judgment and decision-making under uncertainty". Much recent economic study has been explicitly examining the irrationality of people and their economic decisions. Economics is a science but it is one where it is challenging to design experiments and so much of the data comes from empirical analysis.

          That is why it is more like the weather than mathematics.

          Mathematics is a language to describe things. Economics isn't a branch of mathematics any more or less than any other science. It is however a bit like studying the weather in that the forecasting models are trying to make predictions about a very complex and chaotic [wikipedia.org] system. The models get their data from historical real world events but perfect accuracy in the models is nigh unacheivable.

        • *Mathematics* isn't science. It is more properly a branch of philosophy that happens to be really, really useful for the sciences. The difference is that sciences are empirical---ideally, scientists observe the world, form explanations of their observations, then test those explanations with further observations. Mathematics is not empirical---mathematicians start from a set of fundamental assumptions, then use logic to deduce the consequences of those assumptions.

          From the summary, it seems that the crit

      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by vlad30 ( 44644 )
        reminds me of the joke about the mathematician an engineer and an accountant are all asked to add 2+2

        The mathematician says 4

        The engineer after using his slide rule answers 4.00000 within acceptable margin of error

        the accountant says "what would you like it to be ?"

        economists are just accountants with bigger numbers

    • by raymorris ( 2726007 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @10:23AM (#50444077) Journal

      My understanding of the difference is that this produces somewhat testable results WITHOUT requiring a theory of how and why those effects occur.

      To give an extremely simplified example, assume that a certain coin is flipped every day. For the past 20,000 days, it has always come up heads. (Obviously not a fair coin). The machine will predict that it will probably come up heads tomorrow. Traditional economic theory will try to understand WHY it keeps coming up heads before making predictions. That's the first difference.

      The requirement for a theory that explains how and why economic effects occur also means that the theory is subject to subject to be supported or decried based on political considerations or other irrelevant factors. A system which accurately predicts what will happen without comment on politically sensitive policy questions may be useful.

      • by plover ( 150551 )

        You're right. Neural networks are trained to spot only outcomes, and don't understand the inputs. Economists try to put human behaviors and motivations into selecting their equations, and when they find an equation that matches reality, they claim to have modeled the behavior. But the "math problem" isn't the real problem here.

        Regardless of how these equations are arrived at, whether it be from some economist or from some neural network, the next step is for someone to exploit them for gain. "Hey, if we

      • Instead of A coin flipped for 20000 days, they take data on... say... 100 coins.
        VARIOUS data. Weight, color, date on coin, number of scratches, source of coin, air temperature, does flipper of coins like dogs or cats...
        Then they flip those coins for some number of times and write all that data down too.
        Including the sequence of results - heads, heads, heads, tails, tails, heads...
        They get a BIG pile of data to mine.

        Then, and this is a clincher, they "Distinguish between causal effects and attributes".
        In oth

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      > Isn't this the same as having economists doing the work, just faster?

      Of course not! A machine is a cold, emotionless, insensitive, empathy-deprived entity, while an economist...

      Hmm, it really is the same...

      • by plover ( 150551 )

        > Isn't this the same as having economists doing the work, just faster?

        Of course not! A machine is a cold, emotionless, insensitive, empathy-deprived entity, while an economist...

        Hmm, it really is the same...

        In other words, instead of calling it "the dismal science", we should be calling them "the dismal scientists".

    • Re:Same issues (Score:5, Insightful)

      by pla ( 258480 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @10:31AM (#50444149) Journal
      Isn't this the same as having economists doing the work, just faster? You are still using past data to predict the future

      Yes and no. In a sense, letting AI learn the salient traits of the available data just saves a human from needing to do it; but, you can do something with an algorithm that you can't reliably do with a human - You can model the existing system, then test billions of hypothetical situations to see how they respond.

      Humans work amazingly well at pattern matching, even in the absence of understanding of "why". We can even get good at predicting what will likely happen if we change a few inputs to a system. But we don't do so well at figuring out what will happen if we tweak a large number of inputs simultaneously.

      Think of this as nothing more than finally making batch hypothesis testing possible in an objective way, in a field where a persuasive argument matters more than facts and where a real experiment can take a few generations to fully show its outcome.
  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @10:06AM (#50443917)

    >> the field of economics frequently uses math in an unhealthy way

    Yikes, if you think that's bad, you'd better not look at the "social" sciences then.

    • ORLY? Linguistics uses math in a much healthier way than economics.

      • Well liguistics being just another form of math, this is unsurprising. It's barely a social science- only because without language social constructs cease to exist.

        Linguistics is just assembly math for higher level communication.

    • by Faust6 ( 4161211 )
      I think you mean the other Social Sciences since Economics is one. It's the main reason the Left likes to trash the discipline as unscientific (whilst championing popular figures like Stiglitz, Krugman and Piketty). In truth they're all scientific: in part. They're equally comprised of philosophy.
      • Economics could only be considered a social science to the extent it deals with the interactions of trade between people, and the objective results of people with different subjective desires.

        Economics can also be one of the hardest sciences there is, on par with kinematics: Economics invented game theory, and has many mathematical theorems, like the Law of Supply and Demand, the Law of Comparative Advantage, and the Black-Scholes model.

        • by Faust6 ( 4161211 )
          I agree. But the basis or driver of these theorems is still social/psychological given the need for narrowly defined rational self-interest.
          • Hmmm. Not necessarily. You can apply economics to any situation where multiple, scarce resources must be allocated to autonomous consumers based on some criteria.

            Suppose I have resources A and B. To accomplish task Y I'd need 2 A or 3 B; and to accomplish task Z I'd need 3 A and 5 B.

            It doesn't matter if A/B is RAM/HDD or doctors/nurses. Economics says that, even though A is better at both tasks than B, it'll actually be cheapest to deploy B to task Y if and deploy A to task Z.

            It's really no different than s

            • How are human wants arbitrary? We want sex with attractive people, good food, luxury, entertainment etc..., all defined by our biology...not arbitrary at all.

              • The reasons why we have certain desires don't have any impact the actual laws of economics.

                Also, none of those are necessarily true. They might be true for 90-99.99% of the population, but not as a matter of definite fact.

    • Sounds like Michael Chrichton's ranting about aliens and global warming, pointing out that a lot of our mathematical equations are [Unknowable] = [Bunch of unknowable variables multiplied together]. The Drake Equation, for example, says there's as much a chance of us finding aliens or aliens existing or whatever based on how many planets there are, how many are inhabited by aliens, etc., just a pile of quantities we can't know.

      I actually considered hanging lampshades on this when I described wealth and

    • by Anonymous Coward

      And all the breakthroughs are being done by psycholgists like Dan Kahneman who are showing that people and markets are anything but rational. The Austrian and Chicago schools are turning out to be mostly wrong.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    Many aspects of economics, at least "real world" economics, are not based on logic but on emotions like greed or fear. As a result, they are difficult to describe with rigorous mathematical models. Machine learning may in fact be a more accurate way to predict such things, but as the old saying goes past performance may not guarantee future results, and since all machine learning algorithms have to go on are past performance, they too will be prone to surprises and the quirks of human nature.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Putting that stuff near "science" or "maths" is an insult to those fields of endeeavour.

    Which economists predicted 2007/2008?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      the Austrian school of economics did.

      • And a broken clock is right twice a day.

        Economics really is just political debate using numbers, and much of the trouble in the world comes from people using economists' opinions for anything beyond entertainment value. People are going to look back on today's economists the way we look back at alchemists.

        • by Faust6 ( 4161211 )
          I'd argue "much of the trouble" is due to politicians misquoting, misunderstanding and inappropriately applying outdated neo-classical Economic theories in their arguments. For the Right, namely. Economists namely debate amongst themselves. Few reach the stardom to regularly appear in media, and those that do are always leftists. It's true you can't separate politics from Economics but there's a wealth of influential work that isn't partisan, except perhaps in the sense that it's done in the spirit of prot
        • A clock running at 4x normal speed will be right more than twice a day.
    • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @11:46AM (#50444799)

      Putting that stuff near "science" or "maths" is an insult to those fields of endeeavour.

      Not any more than meteorology or ecology or geology or any other field that gets its data from complex and chaotic empirical sources.

      Which economists predicted 2007/2008?

      Quite a few of them. Some didn't get their timing right but I can introduce you to economists and financial analysts that I know personally that were warning about a likely crash in the housing market and knock on effects as far back as 2003. They obviously couldn't predict the exact outcome because that is basically impossible in a large chaotic system. (especially when you cannot perfectly model the initial state)

      People have this naive idea that economists ought to be able to predict the future perfectly or it isn't a science. Predicting the recession of 2008 was something akin to a geologist trying to predict exactly when and where an earthquake will hit. There are too many unknowns to make anything better than a probabilistic analysis. They can tell you there is an X% chance of an event happening within time period Y. Asking for something more accurate than that is simply unrealistic expectations.

      • by jbengt ( 874751 )

        Which economists predicted 2007/2008?

        Quite a few of them. Some didn't get their timing right but I can introduce you to economists and financial analysts that I know personally that were warning about a likely crash in the housing market and knock on effects as far back as 2003.

        Hell, I predicted that the housing market would crash well before that (after a hi-rise condo developer I knew told me that 20% of their sales were to speculators who never had any intention of moving in). Does that make me right when the prices kept going up for years before crashing to levels still above the prices that were typical when I first thought it was going to crash?

        Putting that stuff near "science" or "maths" is an insult to those fields of endeeavour.

        Not any more than meteorology or ecology or geology or any other field that gets its data from complex and chaotic empirical sources.

        The

    • Many economists predicted it. However, the exact timing for bubble bursting is... not well done.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    He says many economists don't use math as a tool to describe reality, but rather as an abstract foundation for whatever theory they've come up with.

    Surely these aren't mutually exclusive; don't physicists use mathematics as an abstract foundation for whatever theory they've come up with to describe reality? And just like in physics, assumptions are made. The difference seems to be that while physicists are aware that their models are incomplete, economists (or, more likely, journalists, politicians, and the people who actually apply these models) etc. disregard these caveats and claim that this model describes the entire financial system in a few dif

    • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @11:53AM (#50444865)

      The difference seems to be that while physicists are aware that their models are incomplete, economists (or, more likely, journalists, politicians, and the people who actually apply these models) etc. disregard these caveats and claim that this model describes the entire financial system in a few differential equations.

      Economists don't disregard the limitations of their models at all. If you would spend some time speaking with actual economists (I have) you'd quickly find out that they are exquisitely aware of the limitations of their models.

      Where things tend to go off the rails is when financial analysts with a profit motive try to stretch the economists models beyond what they can actually explain. A great example of this is Long Term Capital Management [wikipedia.org] which was described in the book When Genius Failed. They took some models with a long list of assumptions and limitations and tried to apply the models to areas well beyond the limitations of the model. Early success begat hubris which led to greed and ultimately their downfall.

  • who are usually more concerned about giving policy recommendations than in making forecasts

    What? Is this implying that they want to make suggestions about what to do in the present and future to change the future without being the least bit concerned with forecasting the future? I don't think I would listen to anyone who wants to make important changes/suggestions without them being very concerned with attempting to predict the future of the situation at hand.

    Also,

    the field of economics frequently uses math in an unhealthy way

    As an EE having taken many econ classes, I can wholeheartedly agree with this statement.

  • by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @10:13AM (#50443977) Homepage

    Let's be clear: how you think economics is defined by your ideology, and most economics is bad math with unfounded assumptions arriving at un-supportable conclusions.

    So, if you're the Chinese government and think you can manipulate markets to suit your beliefs, you'll be horribly mistaken. Likewise, if you subscribe to the ridiculous Austrian School of economics (which refuses to have empirical evidence), then you likewise believe your theory is so perfect it doesn't need to be validated.

    Nobody has ever had any proof for "trickle down economics" other than they think it should work and it suits their ideology, but 30 years of actual real world data mostly shows it's utterly failed to work as planned.

    Economics is useful to look at what came before, and understand some limited problems ... but in general many people believe once you try to use that to predict things, or influence outcomes you get into a level of complete bullshit and voodoo. Time and time again when people try to take action or set policy based on economics, it fails utterly.

    And until economics is based on anything other than sketchy math and ideology, it can never be a real science or have much more meaning than something people use to defend their ideology. But since people never look at economics separated from their ideology, it will never happen.

    Economics is mostly a tool to make it look like the things you believe should happen, based on how you want the system to behave, have any actual relationship with the outcomes you expect to achieve with policy. The problem is that is a lie.

    But it sure as hell can't be called an objective science. First you have to believe in the ideology and then you believe in the methodology.

    The problem is people like to believe that the ideology is objective reality, and that their observations are in fact rules. And that simply isn't true.

    • by Faust6 ( 4161211 )
      Where's the Math, let alone the sketchy sort, in any of the examples provided above?
    • Oh yeah, this is just going to total Austrian econ. The idea that math has anything to do with economics (macro or micro) is heresy to them.

      I rather hope this takes off, and well, so that we can finally bury von Mises.

      There was an apocryphal story at my university that one of our Econ professors has been arrested once for urinating on the grave of von Mises. I may have to get in touch with him, and see if he's willing to give it another go.

    • Nobody has ever had any proof for "trickle down economics"

      Just an FYI, no economist has ever supported the idea of "trickle down economics." The concept was created by a comedian (Will Rogers, great guy), and is mainly used the same way Republicans use the word "socialist:" as an insult against people they don't like. And frankly, that's how you're using the term, too.

    • And until economics is based on anything other than sketchy math and ideology, it can never be a real science or have much more meaning than something people use to defend their ideology. But since people never look at economics separated from their ideology, it will never happen.

      It seems like you get most of your economics knowledge from MSNBC or The Daily Show.

      Back in the real world, economic concepts like MV = PQ is one of the most empirically tested ideas around.

    • by Ramze ( 640788 )

      Spoken like someone who has never taken micro or macro economics.

      I can only imagine you get this idea from watching the news -- where political pundits have little grasp on what economics actually IS.

      Economics on the micro scale is actually just common sense. We're talking simple supply and demand curves. There's no ideology involved. If people want X and we restrict the supply of X, the price of X will go up as there is now a shortage. Shortages are a real thing that are well understood. Typically

  • Forecasting (Score:4, Interesting)

    by PPH ( 736903 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @10:15AM (#50444007)

    machine learning is more about forecasting than about understanding the effects of policy

    And forecasting depends on some underlying behavioral model. Problem is, people keep changing the model. They try to anticipate or short markets to gain an advantage and very rapidly, this new response to market conditions replaces the previous behavior, invalidating previous relationships.

  • Charlatans, that the so called 'main street economists' are will not go away with their nonsensical ideas about the need to 'guide' the economy in any way and their ways of 'guiding' the economy is what leads to the economic collapse. Of-course the economists are just mouthpieces of the government and of the Federal reserve, whose entire job is to justify the actions that politicians want to take anyway, actions that promise re-election rather than actions that promise a sound economy and a sound society.

    A

    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @10:37AM (#50444209)

      A sound economy relies on the invisible hand of the market forces

      By which you mean un-knowable magic.

      but in a free market economy

      There is no such thing, never has been. Someone is always lying and cheating, cartels will form, consumers do not have perfect information and make irrational choices. A free market is a complete lie, never has existed and never will.

      Taxes on income and wealth are destructive to the economy because

      Because you say so without proof or evidence. Society cannot exist without maintaining the structures which allow society to exist, and you can't pretend there is a self-regulating human condition which exists independent of society without being delusional.

      As usual, Roman, you've brought your own brand of crazy to this conversation. You spout things as if they are objective natural facts, instead of bullshit premises you take to be true and expect the world to accept because you say it loudly and with bluster.

      And as usual you utterly fail to introduce facts or evidence. Because you believe your magic bullshit is so self evident as to not need facts or evidence.

      It's still not true.

    • by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @10:53AM (#50444333) Homepage

      directing scarce resources and re-allocating mis-allocated resources (and resources do get mis-allocated all the time, but in a free market economy the mis-allocation leads to lack of profits that eventually leads to ceasing of that particular activity and for a great reason n - resources that are mis-allocated hurt the economy).

      And this is the fundamental flaw in your argument.

      Nothing is "mis" allocated, it is allocated where the people who control them put them.

      That this fails to match up with your perfect theory isn't a problem with the random, selfish, and stupid shit people do. It's a problem with your model which says people will achieve the perfect outcome your flawed model predicts.

      What you're saying is, if people will only behave according to how you believe they should, there would be perfect outcomes. And I hate to tell you, but that will never happen.

      I say there is no such thing as perfect outcomes, there is no such thing as rational actors, and there is no collective goal or "proper" allocation of anything. Merely a bunch of greedy, selfish, irrational actors doing whatever the hell makes sense at the time, or what they've been hoodwinked into believing will yield perfect outcomes. Many of whom will utterly fail to play by any rules or with anything other than pure, shortsighted greed.

      If your theory can't account for the randomness of the human animal, it's your theory which is defective. Because the human animal will simply NEVER do anything according to someone's theory which has perfect outcomes.

      The notion of "they're doing it wrong because it doesn't match my ideology" is the problem here.

    • A sound economy relies on the invisible hand of the market forces

      A concept like The Invisible Hand belongs alongside alchemy, astrology and leeching. It is not just non-scientific, it's anti-scientific.

  • ... would be for them to establish sound and sane epistemological foundations for their works. For example they could stop trying to assert they can model human behavior, and instead limit themselves to observations of economical choices made by real, live humans only.

    • That's a bit like trying to predict the weather by looking outside right this moment and forecasting it'll be the same tomorrow though. You observe the people, develop a model that attempts to predict their actions, then use the model to attempt to predict future actions, thus allowing you to make accurate forecasts.

      Besides that, to misuse Asimov, predicting a human is hard. Predicting a group of humans is substantially easier.

  • That would make the techniques less interesting to many economists, who are usually more concerned about giving policy recommendations than in making forecasts.

    Decision Maker: The opposition and the polls are beating me up over the jobs numbers. Give me some policy advice, economist.

    Economist: I think you should implement this policy.

    Decision Maker: Will it improve the jobs numbers?

    Economist: I have no idea what the outcome of the policy will be, I just made some stuff up.

    Isn't the entire point of policy recommendations to achieve some kind of desired goal? Even if the policy recommendation is based on pure ideology, usually the alignment with the ideology i

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @10:27AM (#50444115)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Intrepid imaginaut ( 1970940 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @10:52AM (#50444331)

      Marx as an economist is one of the few to provide a very broad overview of the concept as it applies to modern capitalism.

      Marx was a drunken idiot whose economic "theories" didn't have so much as a means to correctly communicate value. Booms and busts happen when powerful players in the market spot a way to sidestep regulation, whether because the phenomenon was new as with the dot bomb, or because regulation was deliberately removed as with Glass-Steagall which led directly to the most recent recession.

      Still though, the fact that every country which embraces regulated capitalism has experienced a steady improvement in standards of living and wealth would have stuck in old Karl's craw.

      • by johnjaydk ( 584895 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @11:02AM (#50444405)

        Marx was a drunken idiot whose economic "theories" didn't have so much as a means to correctly communicate value.

        His value theory is totally bonkers but much of his diagnosis of the ils of the capitalistic system is fairly good. Where people go wrong, is in looking for the solution in his works. There is a lot arm waving but hardly any coherent solutions.

        • There is a lot arm waving but hardly any coherent solutions.

          Which, in fairness to Marx, is no different than any other economic worldview. They're all incomplete or flawed in their own ways by their very nature.

          They all try to force the world to behave according to arbitrary "rules", which are mostly observations which don't account for nearly as much as they claim to.

          Anybody who claims to have "coherent solutions" in any field of economics is mostly full of shit. I remain unconvinced it is possible to ha

        • Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @11:21AM (#50444587)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Still though, the fact that every country which embraces regulated capitalism has experienced a steady improvement in standards of living and wealth would have stuck in old Karl's craw.

        No, that was his point. Eventually some of the wealthier capitalists will be that wealthy, that they can buy out every gouvernment and the regulations will be dropped.

      • every country which embraces regulated capitalism has experienced a steady improvement in standards of living and wealth would have stuck in old Karl's craw.

        Marx advocated most of the things that regulated capitalism did. Remember, the Communist Manifesto was really advocating Socialism, not what is now called Communism.

        There were ten areas he wanted to change. Some of them are now considered to be such "duh" ideas they will remain forever: Progressive taxation and universal education. Some are definite

    • Ah, yes, Karl Marx, beloved of the Left, the man whose economic theories led to the deaths of 10^8 innocent people. Let's all pay attention to him instead of throwing his thought in the dustbin of history, like all the Marxist countries have already done decades ago. Surely, his ideas will work THIS time.
      • Personally, I think that people are incorrect when they think of Marx as an economist. He wasn't. He was more of a socialogist. His economics were a side-note compared to the class struggle portion. It's just that you can't build a utopian social theory, like many philosophers have before, without touching upon economics. He was right that the social structures of the time were unsustainable though.

  • Psychology (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Mycroft-X ( 11435 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @10:27AM (#50444119)

    That's because economics is a blend of math and psychology. The math assumes a rational actor with all the necessary information. The psychology is rarely rational and involved decision making influenced by the decisions of others, highly varied interpretations of historical events which preclude deterministic mechanisms, and imperfect information viewed through personal biases and strengths. Inaccuracy results from improperly weighting the relative value of these two in economic outcomes and from difficulty in modeling the psychological elements. Bad math is the least of the challenges facing economics.

    • by Faust6 ( 4161211 )
      The psychological aspect is mostly tied to the concept of utility. It's rather dubious but only a subset of what's taught of traditional Microeconomic theory. The rest leans towards Philosophy.
    • It depends on the school of economics. The Austrian school makes no such assumption which is why it lacks specific predictive ability. It is based on how humans act which is basically they pick from what they perceive as the best choice of those they see as available at the time. What this doesn't allow is your judgement as to what is rational. If someone decides at a certain time smoking a bowl is preferable to going to work at that moment than that is what they do otherwise they would do something else.

  • by rockmuelle ( 575982 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @10:32AM (#50444155)

    To illustrate, the summary could easily be restated this way:

    "...field of [data science] frequently uses [machine learning] in an unhealthy way. Many [data scientists] don't use [machine learning] as a tool to describe reality, but rather as an abstract foundation for whatever theory they've come up with."

    Replacing "math" with "machine learning" isn't going to make a difference if the practitioners don't understand how to use it properly. Machine learning models are much more subtle and complex than simple mathematical models and very easy to misuse. To use them properly, you really need a much stronger understanding of the math behind them than most people have.

    See the entire field of psychology and most GWAS studies for an example of where over reliance on (simple) models can get you into a lot of trouble.

    -Chris

  • Machine learning won't 'solve' the economics problem (a problem which the TFA doesn't really define). The problem with math in economics is that economic time-series is extremely chaotic -- a practically infinitesimal change in initial conditions vastly changes the outcome of the system. Hey, remember how we can only predict the weather out 15 days *max* (using big ass supercomputers along with lots of soil moisture content, temperature, wind and other seasonal data)?... well the weather is just one of the

  • by meburke ( 736645 ) on Wednesday September 02, 2015 @11:44AM (#50444785)

    Yeah, Economists (and I'm an avid amateur) use a language that is not precise to describe behavior that is not able to be precisely measured. Take the word "rational" for instance: Rationality in psychological terms implies something on the order of optimization in general, while rational in economic terms is optimization for individual behavior. Yes, an individual may change to the faster moving line or lane, but that only has a cumulative effect on the mass of behavior, and does not add to strategy as a whole. Individual behavior does not advance knowledge of the subject; it is only the accumulated effects of individual behaviors that reveal Economic behavior and may reveal Economic principles.

    The closest thing we have in in tech terms is "emergent systems" and economics actually closely resembles an experiment in complex systems.

    The other imprecision is to generalize about Economists. Some Economists are idealists or philosophers and deal in theory only, trying to determine "the way things should be." Some Economists are technologists and are mostly concerned about using the information to manipulate outcomes. (Many negative effects are a result of Economists who do both of these!) Somewhere in between these two types is the Economic Scientist whose main concern is finding out what is going on, proving that it is valid, and who can use the information to actually predict Economic behavior. It seems to me that machine learning actually serves the Economic Scientist.

  • It seems most economists have 'cet par' on the tips of their forked tongues. Ceteris Paribus meaning 'other things being equal', which is rarely ever true in meat space.

    However, to truly model economist behavior, I think quantum machines should be used, so they can offer two conflicting opinions at the exact same time.
  • That is they appear to work without giving you a deep understanding of they work. I am talking about neural networks and their most recent incarnation in deep learning. I would consider this approach to be engineering rather than science.
  • If economics involves a method for the distribution of wealth I simply do not believe that the US or many other nations actually have an economy at all. In essence in the US the economy is a dog pile of nonsense. There is no system of logic behind it at all. We can compare it to our justice system. Supposedly justice has to do with a code of behavior and the application of judgement and remedies to various situations designed to support that code. But that is not the truth. Our laws are nothing mo
  • I've been reading a lot of economics the last few years, trying to figure out why it's so full of shit.
    It seems mainstream (neoclassical/keynesian synthesis) economists believe in mathematics but don't believe in reality.
    Their close kin the Austrians don't believe in mathematics either.
    They both believe economies are in equilibrium, this is a fundamental assumption, and other nonsense like 'people behave rationally', 'people have perfect information' etc.
    These are not a priori assumptions like a physicist m

"The following is not for the weak of heart or Fundamentalists." -- Dave Barry

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