John Cassidy vs Brad DeLong

Brad DeLong is clearly much more important than I am. When I say

rude things about John Cassidy, nothing much happens. But when Brad says

rude things about John Cassidy, he gets a stinging riposte from Cassidy

in his comments section, where Cassidy calls DeLong’s posting "misleading

and intemperate," and finishes with quite a flourish:

Brad, you are forever berating economic journalists. Some of that is healthy:

we all make mistakes. But somebody who sets himself up as a professional arbiter

needs to have high standards. In this instance, the quality of your research

was unworthy of a wire service rookie, let alone a tenured professor at a

prestigious university.

The substantive disagreement between Cassidy and DeLong concerns the US economy’s

growth prospects in mid-2002. Cassidy

says they were healthy:

By the middle of 2002, however, it was clear that for whatever reason—low

interest rates, the Bush tax cuts, increased military spending—the economy

was staging an amazingly robust recovery.

DeLong says that Cassidy is wrong, and that "the recovery did not become

anything anybody could call ‘robust’ in any sense until 2004."

In his note on DeLong’s blog, Cassidy points out that in June 2002, the official

GDP report for the first quarter of 2002 showed extremely strong growth of 5.6%

– which certainly looks pretty robust on its face.

I’m not qualified to adjudicate this debate, but I can dig up some contemporaneous

accounts of that GDP report. In fact, it was even stronger than Cassidy remembers:

the final estimate of Q1 GDP growth, as reported

by CNN Money on June 27, 2002, was a stunning 6.1%. On the other hand, no

one at the time seemed to view the report as evidence of "an amazingly

robust recovery" – Mark Gongloff’s report

card on the US economy, which was published the day after the 6.1% figure

came out, concluded with an overall rating of just C+.

If I had to pick between the two sides, I think I’d come down in the middle.

I don’t think that the US economy was obviously doing very well in mid-2002,

but I don’t think that Cassidy’s more upbeat view qualifies him for DeLong’s

"Stupidest Man Alive" crown. The cohort of economics commentators

who say vastly more idiotic things than John Cassidy is legion, which implies

that DeLong was too harsh on Cassidy, at least in his headline.

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