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Cowboy Capitalism
and Economic Education
When my former boss retired, I gave him a book of cowboy
wisdom entitled Dont Squat With Yer Spurs On! One
piece of advice the book offers is "No matter who
says what, dont believe it if it dont make
sense."
This wise admonition has steeled
my resolve to keep asking questions of the economists
at the Dallas Fed until I can
understand what theyre telling me. I want them to
translate economic sense into common sense. I have long
believed that a broad public understanding of economic
issues is necessary for sound economic policies. The burden
of leadership is too great if we ask our leaders to adopt
policies that "dont make sense" to their
constituents.
A speaker at one of our conferences
once said, "If
all common sense were right, we wouldnt need economists." His
point was that not all of what economists know about how
the economy works is intuitive. Sometimes it doesnt
make sense without careful thought or study. That is why
I believe that economic education should concentrate on
that part of accepted professional wisdom that "dont
make sense" and wont be believed without a special
economic education effort.
Most of us are willing to admit how little we know about
quantum physics or biomedical engineering. In those areas,
we are willing to accept the judgment of experts. Not so
with economics. Since economics touches our daily lives,
most of us regard ourselves as amateur economists and are
willing to accept professional opinion only to the extent
that it makes sense.
Several years ago when I took the helm of the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas, one of my key priorities was for
the Dallas Fed to become a beacon for free enterprise and
to actively promote understanding on how a free enterprise
market economy works. We, as Americans, should strive to
understand the system that has provided us with the highest
standard of living of any nation in the world.
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