The Prime of Mr. Nouriel Roubini

Portfolio profiles Nouriel Roubini:

Not only has Roubini been a professional downer for years, his reasoning has frequently been off. He first predicted, incorrectly, that there would be a bust as a result of Hurricane Katrina, and later, again incorrectly, that the economy would tank as a result of trade imbalances. The collapse was initially triggered by subprime-credit problems, and he initially underestimated how devastating they would be. More than a few economists are convinced that Roubini’s call was less a matter of his genius and more about the simple fact that if you forecast a recession often enough, sooner or later you’ll be vindicated. “Nouriel Roubini has been singing the doom-and-gloom story for 10 years,” says Nariman Behravesh, chief economist for IHS Global Insight. “Eventually something was going to be right.”

To pick up on my earlier criticism of fixcnbc.com, the manifesto that wants CNBC to hire “people who have a track record of being right about the economic crisis.”
Not only is that wrong, it’s the opposite of what CNBC ought to do. Their assumption is that economic forecasting is similar to shooting foul shots—just get someone who’s good and don’t use someone who’s bad. Easy.
Forecasting, if it has any merits, doesn’t work that way. The type of person who’s more likely to be correct on something like the current economic mess will probably have been totally off on their previous 20 predictions. That’s both a reflection on their nature and the nature of the credit mess.
Mainstream economists are very good at relaying the conventional wisdom. But when a crisis occurs, those well-known patterns and trends often break down, and those marginal voices are more open to seeing different outcomes. Their benefit is that they’re misaligned with the rest of the crowd.
What CNBC ought to do is have a variety of commentators reflecting a broad spectrum of views. If you’re looking to purge those who were incorrect, you’ll soon run out of economists.

Posted by on March 18th, 2009 at 11:48 am


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