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Titre : (Mis)leading Indicators : Why Our Economic Numbers Distort Reality Type de document : document électronique Auteurs : Zachary Karabell, Auteur Editeur : Foreign Affairs Année de publication : March-April 2014 Importance : 9 p Langues : Anglais (eng) Tags : Economie politique Science économique Indicateurs économiques Résumé : Economic numbers have come to define our world. Individuals, organizations, and governments assess how they are doing based on what these numbers tell them. Economists and analysts loosely refer to statistics measuring GDP, unemployment, inflation, and trade deficits as "leading indicators" and subscribe to the belief that these figures accurately reflect reality and provide unique insights into the health of an economy. Taken together, leading indicators create a data map that people use to navigate their lives. That map, however, is showing signs of age. Understanding where the map came from should help explain why it has become less reliable than ever before.
Economic numbers have come to define our world. Individuals, organizations, and governments assess how they are doing based on what these numbers tell them. Economists and analysts loosely refer to statistics measuring GDP, unemployment, inflation, and trade deficits as "leading indicators" and subscribe to the belief that these figures accurately reflect reality and provide unique insights into the health of an economy. Taken together, leading indicators create a data map that people use to navigate their lives. That map, however, is showing signs of age. Understanding where the map came from should help explain why it has become less reliable than ever before.En ligne : http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/140749/zachary-karabell/misleading-indica [...] (Mis)leading Indicators : Why Our Economic Numbers Distort Reality [document électronique] / Zachary Karabell, Auteur . - USA : Foreign Affairs, March-April 2014 . - 9 p.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Tags : Economie politique Science économique Indicateurs économiques Résumé : Economic numbers have come to define our world. Individuals, organizations, and governments assess how they are doing based on what these numbers tell them. Economists and analysts loosely refer to statistics measuring GDP, unemployment, inflation, and trade deficits as "leading indicators" and subscribe to the belief that these figures accurately reflect reality and provide unique insights into the health of an economy. Taken together, leading indicators create a data map that people use to navigate their lives. That map, however, is showing signs of age. Understanding where the map came from should help explain why it has become less reliable than ever before.
Economic numbers have come to define our world. Individuals, organizations, and governments assess how they are doing based on what these numbers tell them. Economists and analysts loosely refer to statistics measuring GDP, unemployment, inflation, and trade deficits as "leading indicators" and subscribe to the belief that these figures accurately reflect reality and provide unique insights into the health of an economy. Taken together, leading indicators create a data map that people use to navigate their lives. That map, however, is showing signs of age. Understanding where the map came from should help explain why it has become less reliable than ever before.En ligne : http://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/140749/zachary-karabell/misleading-indica [...] Documents numériques
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