Saw Tyler Cowen doubling down on that tired narrative about the $140K threshold. His suggestion? "Just look at Guatemala if you think that's hard."
This is textbook deflection from someone who should know better.
Let me be clear: CPI isn't some grand conspiracy theory. But here's the problem—it's an objectively poor tool for gauging what ordinary people actually experience at ground level. Using aggregate price indices to dismiss legitimate concerns about cost of living? That's lazy analysis dressed up as wisdom.
When prominent economists keep recycling establishment talking points instead of wrestling with measurement limitations, we all lose. The debate shouldn't be "is CPI rigged" versus "everything's fine." It should be: are we using the right tools to capture economic reality for median participants?
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CommunityJanitor
· 12-01 16:58
Tyler Cowen's trap of comparative argumentation is really annoying; like most economists, he just knows how to pass the buck.
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ConsensusBot
· 12-01 16:58
cowen's trap is really amazing, using Guatemala to shift the blame... alright everyone
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just_here_for_vibes
· 12-01 16:52
The "let's see Guatemala to understand" trap by Cowen is truly outrageous. This is a common flaw among economists, throwing macro data around to make a point.
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ser_ngmi
· 12-01 16:51
It's just the same old trick of "Be content by looking at Guatemala" again, I'm really impressed.
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Ramen_Until_Rich
· 12-01 16:51
It's the same old trap of comparing who's worse, it's truly ridiculous.
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FarmHopper
· 12-01 16:37
This cowen trap is really amazing, bringing in Guadeloupe to shift the blame is truly ridiculous... CPI just can't measure our real lives.
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MetaMaskVictim
· 12-01 16:34
Tyler Cowen's trap of comparative reasoning is really verbose... it's totally unreasonable to bring up Guatemala.
Saw Tyler Cowen doubling down on that tired narrative about the $140K threshold. His suggestion? "Just look at Guatemala if you think that's hard."
This is textbook deflection from someone who should know better.
Let me be clear: CPI isn't some grand conspiracy theory. But here's the problem—it's an objectively poor tool for gauging what ordinary people actually experience at ground level. Using aggregate price indices to dismiss legitimate concerns about cost of living? That's lazy analysis dressed up as wisdom.
When prominent economists keep recycling establishment talking points instead of wrestling with measurement limitations, we all lose. The debate shouldn't be "is CPI rigged" versus "everything's fine." It should be: are we using the right tools to capture economic reality for median participants?