Felix Geiger
1.9K posts

Felix Geiger
@Flx_Geiger
@bundesbank | views are my own | private | monetary policy, financial markets, finance, economics | retweets, likes and following do not imply endorsement







Economics is mostly a bullshit field of study. It is specifically for people who can do a little bit of stats and calc and want to feel smart but too dumb to study physics or math. Most economic theories are built like this: they start with an assumption about human behavior. Then without checking if the assumption is true, they will pile on layers of sloppy math on it and come to all sorts of conclusions that obviously don’t hold up in the real world. Recently a couple of economists won the Nobel Prize for being the first to realize that assumptions about human behavior must be tested and they went out and did some field work, and proved that a lot of assumptions in economic theories about how humans behave with money are well just not true. I was working at a bank for 2 years and saw firsthand that economics PhDs tend to be the dumbest. These people are completely alien to the idea of first principles thinking and treat axioms as if they were written in the Bible. Also they don’t really understand what an axiom is. Economics only exists because your average normie is easily impressed buy math and midwits in power are not scientific enough to realize that it is all voodoo and keep taking economists seriously. I don’t blame them though, at some point they hit an intelligence wall and the average economist brain is simply not equipped to have meta level thoughts about their own field of study. I guess this is one of those bullshit jobs like HR, therapy, astrology, project management that will just stay around for a while cause most humans are either mid or retarded.







1/ Fascinating and important report from Goldman Sachs. They have upgraded long-term GDP of China because of increased exports, but see this as reducing, not increasing, rest of world GDP. Chinese displacement of domestic manufacturing swamps any positives from cheaper goods.

SF Fed study examines 150 years of U.S. tariffs and find that they lead to lower inflation and weaker aggregate demand (which raises unemployment) frbsf.org/wp-content/upl…


















