by Roger
McKinney, 8/31/15,
After the stock
market stumbling through the past two weeks, you will hear top mainstream
economists repeat the old joke that the market has predicted ten of the last
eight recessions. The point of the joke is to belittle the idea that the market
can predict recessions and to convince investors to remain fully invested.
Austan Goolsbee echoed the joke on National Public Radio recently then
insisted the economy was fine and he saw no recession in the near future.
When asked if now was a good time to panic, he said it’s never a good time to
panic and people should just ignore what the market does.
It is true that
the market has predicted more recessions than actually happened, but if anyone
will examine the data they will find that growth slowed dramatically after
major declines in the market even though the fall wasn’t deep enough for the
National Bureau of Economic Research to declare an official recession. But even
with its false positives, the market has done a better job of predicting
recessions than have any mainstream economists.
How many
recessions have mainstream economists successfully predicted? Zip! Zero! Nada!
A big fat goose egg! For the past century, mainstream economists have read
Goolsbee’s script with each decline in the stock market and continued to insist
that no recession was coming, until it did.
What is the
business cycle theory of mainstream economists? As I have written before, it is
essentially “crap happens!” Their highly technical terminology claims the
economy is spinning like a top in perfect “equilibrium” most of the time but
then “shocks” knock it cockeyed and send it wobbling. The definition of a shock
is anything that mainstream economists didn’t see coming, which means that they
stay in a perpetual state of shock.
Another way of putting
mainstream business-cycle theory is to say that recessions are random events.
Like a giant roulette wheel on which red represents growth and black means
recession, the ball just lands on black sometimes. By definition no one can
predict random events, which means that mainstream economists contradict their
business-cycle theory when they claim that they can predict the onset of
recessions. And when they claim they see no recession in the near future they
are claiming the ability to predict recessions. What they should say is exactly
what the London School of Economics economists said to the
Queen when she asked them why they had
failed to see the worst recessions since the Great Depression coming:
recessions are random events so we successfully predicted that no one can
predict recessions. Of course, no mainstream economist in the US will ever
admit to being ignorant of something, no matter how ignorant they really are.
Of course, Austrian
economists cannot predict the onset of a recession even within a year of its
start, but at least they expect them to happen on a regular basis and examine
the entrails of the economy looking for omens. Being conservative, they may
call the recession too early. But they never get blindsided as do mainstream
economists.
The correct
answer to the question “when is a good time to panic?” is “before the stock
market collapses.” That may mean that investors get out of the market and into
cash early, but if you got out of the market a year ago and into 10-yr bonds,
you would have earned more than those who are still in the stock market.
The stock market
is the most honest voting process in the world and most voters are telling us
they see another recession coming in which profits, and therefore the market,
will get trampled. If it’s wrong, there will at least be a slowdown in the
economy. When you need a forecast, who you gonna call? The stock market with a
few false positives or mainstream economists who have a solid 100% record of
failure?
http://affluentinvestor.com/2015/08/us-stock-market-predicting-recession/
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