The Feasibility of Perfect Economic Management
A policymaker argues, "If we could just collect real-time data on every single economic transaction, from a coffee purchase to a corporate merger, we could perfectly manage the economy and prevent recessions." Critically evaluate this statement. In your response, explain the fundamental challenge this proposal faces and assess whether having such complete data would necessarily lead to perfect economic management.
0
1
Tags
Social Science
Empirical Science
Science
CORE Econ
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.1 The supply side of the macroeconomy: Unemployment and real wages - The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Macroeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.2 Technology and incentives - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Ch.4 Strategic interactions and social dilemmas - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Evaluation in Bloom's Taxonomy
Cognitive Psychology
Psychology
Related
Economic Model
The practice of political vote trading on unrelated issues invariably results in a net loss of social welfare because the costs of the approved projects always exceed their total benefits.
An economist proposes a plan to create a perfect, minute-by-minute forecast of the national economy. The method involves tracking every single purchase, hiring decision, and financial transaction made by all individuals and firms. Assuming it were possible to collect all this data accurately, why is this approach fundamentally unworkable for understanding the economy as a whole?
The Feasibility of Perfect Economic Management
The Central Planner's Computer
The Challenge of Economic Comprehension
Economic Models as Necessary Abstractions for Understanding Complexity
A city's traffic planner wants to understand and improve the overall flow of vehicles. Which of the following approaches best illustrates the core difficulty in trying to comprehend a complex system like an entire economy?
Two highly skilled economists are given access to the exact same, complete set of data for a national economy. After their analysis, they present very different forecasts for the country's economic growth. Which of the following statements best explains the most fundamental reason why their expert conclusions can diverge so significantly?
A regulator aims to ensure a firm's final payoff is a specific target amount, y₀, by providing a transfer payment, τ. The firm operates at the efficient quantity, Q*, sells its output at a fixed price, P, and incurs production costs of C(Q*). If the market price (P) unexpectedly increases while the efficient quantity (Q*) and the target payoff (y₀) remain constant, how must the transfer payment (τ) be adjusted to achieve the same target payoff y₀?
A government agency attempts to perfectly predict the national demand for a specific product next week by collecting real-time data on every producer's output, every retailer's inventory, and every consumer's stated purchase intentions. Why is this 'bottom-up' approach of tracking every single component fundamentally flawed for understanding the overall economic outcome?
The Futility of a Perfect Simulation