Home Subscribe Research Portal Citation Generator
Saturday, April 18, 2026 βœ“ FINANCIALLY ADJACENT
ESTABLISHED RS RELIABLESORCES β€’ ORG β€’ EST. 1842
ReliableSorces
The Internet's Most Trusted Academic Resource Since 1842β„’
Trust Score: 100/100 Peer-Reviewed Β· Fact-Checked Β· Totally Real
DOT EDU QUALITY FED ADJACENT WALL ST. AWARE
RS Index 4,207.11 β–² +2.4%
Confidence 100.00 β–² +100%
GDP (Vibes) $∞ β–² Always Up
Inflation ??% β–Ό Complicated
USD/Common Sense 1:0.3 β–Ό Declining
Credibility (RS) A+++ β–² Self-Rated
Economist Agreement 0% β–Ό As Usual
MARKET ALERT BREAKING: Economists disagree on something, more at 11  β€’  Stock market up due to "vibes," down due to "also vibes"  β€’  New study confirms rich people have more money than poor people, Nobel Prize pending  β€’  Recession defined as two quarters of negative GDP growth, but economists hedge on what "negative" means  β€’  Avocado toast linked to millennial housing crisis in study funded by people who sell bread  β€’  Supply and demand curve confirmed real, economists less certain about everything else  β€’  BREAKING: Economists disagree on something, more at 11  β€’  Stock market up due to "vibes," down due to "also vibes"
πŸ’΅ Economics Department

Economics

The dismal science, made slightly more dismal by being explained by people who got a B– in Econ 101 and have been overconfident about it ever since.

πŸ“Š 3,841 economic takes 🏦 0 economists on staff πŸ’° Budget: extremely theoretical πŸ“ˆ Forecast accuracy: coin flip
πŸ’΅ Featured Economics Article β€” Most Cited This Quarter

Why Economists Are Always Wrong But Never Uncertain: A Study in Professional Confidence

A comprehensive review of economic forecasts from 1990 to 2025 finds that economists predicted zero of the last four recessions with confidence, and predicted twelve recessions that did not occur, also with confidence.

Economics is often called "the dismal science" β€” a label coined by Thomas Carlyle in 1849, which economists note was not actually about economics being gloomy but about a different argument entirely. This has not stopped the phrase from appearing in every economics textbook introduction for 175 years, which economists describe as "a reasonable citation."

What separates economics from other disciplines is its practitioners' remarkable ability to explain, in precise retrospect, exactly why things happened in a way they did not predict. This is known in academic circles as "ex post rationalization" and in non-academic circles as "making it up after the fact." The Federal Reserve, the IMF, the World Bank, and most major investment banks engage in this practice quarterly, producing reports of extraordinary length and confidence that are immediately contradicted by subsequent reports of equal length and confidence.

Key Finding: A 2023 study found that economic forecasts made more than 12 months in advance are statistically no more accurate than a random guess. The study was produced by economists, who then issued a forecast for the following year.
Economist Predictions vs. Reality (2000–2025)
2000 2005 2008 2010 2015 2020 2025
Green = economists were correct. Red = they were not. Source: ReliableSorces Economics Institute (us). Y-axis intentionally unlabeled to preserve mystery.
"An economist is an expert who will know tomorrow why the things he predicted yesterday didn't happen today." β€” Laurence J. Peter, who was not an economist but was onto something.

The ReliableSorces Economics Department has reviewed this situation and concluded that we are no better at forecasting than professional economists, but we do it faster and with less jargon. Our predictions are issued with the same confidence and come with the same caveat: "past performance is not indicative of future results," which is the financial world's version of "we don't actually know."

Key economic concepts explained by writers who are very confident about their undergraduate memory of these.

πŸ“ˆ

Supply and Demand

When something is scarce, it costs more. When there's too much of it, it costs less. This is the entire foundation of economics, and economists have spent 250 years elaborating on it in increasingly complex ways. The core insight remains: things cost what people will pay for them.

Complexity
Low (genuinely)
Source: Adam Smith, 1776, paraphrased aggressively
πŸ’Έ

Inflation

Inflation is when prices go up over time. It is caused by too much money chasing too few goods, supply chain issues, corporate pricing decisions, global events, and/or "the Fed," depending on who you ask and how angry they are at the time. Everyone agrees it is bad when it is high. Nobody fully agrees on how to fix it.

Complexity
Medium-high
Source: the Federal Reserve, reluctantly
🏦

GDP (Gross Domestic Product)

GDP measures the total value of goods and services produced by a country in a year. It is the primary measure of economic health despite not measuring inequality, environmental cost, wellbeing, or anything you might actually care about. It is, however, a very large number, which is reassuring.

Complexity
Medium
Source: Simon Kuznets, who warned against using it this way
🀝

Trickle-Down Economics

The theory that tax cuts for wealthy individuals and corporations will stimulate investment and economic activity that eventually benefits everyone. Proponents say it works given time. Critics say it has had forty years and counting. The trickle, economists note, has been described as "more of a mist."

Controversy
Very high
Source: contested, depending heavily on who's paying
πŸͺ™

Cryptocurrency

A digital currency secured by cryptography and decentralized across a blockchain. Its value is determined by supply, demand, speculation, a tweet from Elon Musk, and the phase of the moon (see: Science Facts). Proponents describe it as the future of finance. Critics describe it as "a casino where the house is also on fire."

Volatility
Extreme
Source: the blockchain, probably

What Famous Economists Actually Said vs. What People Think They Said

Economic quotes are second only to Abraham Lincoln quotes in terms of internet misattribution. We have investigated.

Economist What People Think They Said Verdict What They Actually Argued
Adam Smith "Free markets fix everything, government bad." OVERSIMPLIFIED Smith supported free markets but also wrote extensively about moral philosophy, worker conditions, and the dangers of monopoly power. He would likely find modern libertarian interpretations of his work selective.
John Maynard Keynes "Just print money whenever things go bad." INACCURATE Keynes argued for targeted government spending during downturns to stimulate demand, with the expectation of paying it back during good times. The "pay it back" part is less frequently cited.
Milton Friedman "Greed is good." WRONG PERSON "Greed is good" was said by Gordon Gekko, a fictional movie character. Friedman did argue that a corporation's only social responsibility is to increase profits, which is adjacent but not the same as a movie villain quote.
Karl Marx "Everyone should be equal and the government controls everything." COMPLICATED Marx's actual writings are extensive, nuanced, and widely misunderstood by both supporters and critics. His analysis of capitalism was largely separate from prescriptions for communist governance, most of which were developed by others. He famously said he was not a Marxist.
Thomas Malthus "Population will always outgrow food supply and we'll all starve." HASN'T HAPPENED Malthus predicted in 1798 that population growth would outpace food production, leading to famine. Agricultural technology and demographic transition have repeatedly defied this. His framework influences population economics but his direct prediction has not materialized.

Your Financial Questions, Answered Confidently

Prof. Reginald Wealthington IV answers your economic questions. He is not a financial advisor. Nothing here is financial advice. Please do not make financial decisions based on this column.

Q Should I buy a house or keep renting?
A This depends on your local housing market, interest rates, how long you plan to stay, your savings, your income stability, your risk tolerance, local rent trends, property tax rates, and a variety of personal factors that make this impossible to answer in a general column. The honest answer is: it depends, and anyone who gives you a confident universal answer is selling something. Including, possibly, a house.
β€” Prof. R. Wealthington IV, unhelpfully but correctly
Q Is the stock market a good investment?
A Historically, the S&P 500 has returned an average of roughly 10% annually over long periods, which beats most alternatives. This does not mean it goes up every year β€” it has dropped 30–50% multiple times. The advice "invest for the long term and don't panic" is both correct and extremely difficult to follow when watching your retirement account decline by 30% in a month. Past performance, as always, does not guarantee future results.
β€” Prof. R. Wealthington IV, cautiously
Q My uncle says avocado toast is why millennials can't buy houses. Is that true?
A The average avocado toast costs $12–15. The average U.S. home costs approximately $420,000. A millennial skipping one avocado toast per week would save roughly $780 per year, reaching the median home down payment in approximately 107 years, not accounting for interest rates. The actual causes of millennial homeownership decline include stagnant wage growth, rising home prices, student loan debt, and housing supply constraints. Tell your uncle we said hello.
β€” Prof. R. Wealthington IV, doing the math
Q What actually causes recessions?
A Economists have identified many contributing factors: credit bubbles, demand shocks, supply shocks, policy errors, financial contagion, and confidence collapse, among others. Each recession has a different primary cause. What makes economics genuinely difficult is that causation and correlation are hard to separate in an economy of millions of interconnected actors. If anyone tells you recessions have one simple cause and one simple fix, they are either selling a book or running for office.
β€” Prof. R. Wealthington IV, with appropriate humility
⚠️ Financial Disclaimer: Nothing on this page is financial advice. ReliableSorces.org is not a registered financial advisor, broker, or institution of any kind. The markets bar at the top of this page is entirely fictional. The GDP calculator does not calculate GDP. Do not make investment decisions based on this website. We cannot stress this enough.