President Harry once said that he wanted to find a one-armed economists.
When he asked his economists for advice
they always answered, On the one hand . . . On the other hard.
Truman President Harry Truman once said that he wanted to find a
one-armed economist. When he was right in realizing that econpmists advice is
not always semight forward. This tendency is rooed in one of the Ten Principles
of Economist people face trade-offs. Economists are aware that trade-offs are
involved in most policy decisions. A policy might increase efficiency at the
cost of equity. In might help future generations but hurt current generations. An economist who saya that all
policy decisions are easy is an economist not to be trusted.
Truman was also not alone among presidents in relying on the advice or
economists. Since 1916, the presidents of the United States has received
guidance from the Council of Economic Advisers, which consists of three members
and a staff of several dozen economists. The council, whose offices are just a few steps from the White House,
has no duty other than to advice the president and to write the annual Economic
Report of the President, which discusses recent developments in the economy and
presents the council’s analysis of current policy issues.
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