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The strongman says, "No, that would spatter the stuff all over. I can open the cans with my teeth!"
The economist says "First, we must assume that we have a can opener."
A man takes a balloon ride at a local country fair. A fierce wind suddenly
kicks up, causing the balloon to violently leave the fair and carry its
occupant out into the countryside. The man has no idea where he is, so he
goes down to five meters above ground and asks a passing wanderer: "Excuse me,
sir, can you tell me where I am?"
Eyeing the man in the balloon the passer-by says: "You are in a downed red balloon, five meters above ground."
"How could you possible know that?" asked the passer-by.
"Then you must be in management", said the passer-by.
"Thats right! How did you know?"
"You have such a good view from where you are, and yet you don't know where
you are and you don't know where you are going. The fact is you are in the
exact same position you were in before we met, but now your problem is
somehow my fault!"
Why has astrology been invented? So that economy could be an accurate science.
An economist and an accountant are walking along a large puddle. They get
across a frog jumping on the mud. The economist says: "If you eat the frog
I'll give you $20,000!"
The accountant checks his budget and figures out he's better off eating it,
so he does and collects money.
Continuing along the same puddle they almost step into yet another frog.
The accountant says: "Now, if you eat this frog I'll give you $20,000."
After evaluating the proposal the economist eats the frog and gets the money.
They go on. The accountant starts thinking: "Listen, we both have the
same amount of money we had before, but we both ate frogs. I don't see us
being better off."
The economist: "Well, that's true, but you overlooked the fact that we've
been just involved in $40,000 of trade."
An economist returns to visit his old school. He's interested in the current exam questions and asks his old professor to show some. To his surprice they are exactly the same ones to which he had answered 10 years ago! When he asks about this the professor answers: "the questions are always the same - only the answers change!"
An economic forecaster was known to have an horseshoe prominently displayed above the doorframe of his office. Asked what it was for, he replied "it is a good luck charm that helps my forecasts".
"But do you believe in that superstition?" he was asked.
"Of course not!" he said, "but it works whether you believe in it or not."
An economist was leaving his office building and saw a little boy sitting
on the curb with a dog. The boy yelled at the economist, "Hey, how would
you like to buy a dog."
The man was intrigued by this sales approach and asked the boy, "How much do
you want for your dog."
The boy told him, "Fifty thousand dollars."
"Fifty thousand dollars!" the man repeated in astonishment. "What special
tricks does this dog do that he can earn enough money to be worth fifty
thousand dollars?" the man asked the boy.
The boy replied, "Mister, this dog never made a nickel in his life. Matter
of fact, count what he eats I guess you could say you lose money on him
every year."
The economist felt this was a good time to explain economics to the young man and expounded on how an item had to produce more income than it consumed to equal a puchase price ending with he might get five dollars from someone who just wanted a companion. Feeling he had imparted a very valuable lesson to the young man, the economist went on his way.
A few weeks later, the economist came out of his office building and the
small boy was again sitting on the curb minus the dog. The man said to him,
"I see you took my advise and sold the dog for five dollars."
The boy said, "No, I got fifty thousand dollars for him."
The business man was completely flabbergasted. "How did you ever get fifty
thousand dollars for that dog" he asked.
"It was easy," said the boy. "I traded him for two twenty five thousand
dollar cats."
There are two types of economists:
- those who cannot forecast interest rattes, and
- those who do not know that they cannott forecast interest rates.
An economics professor and a student were strolling through the campus.
"Look," the student cried, "there's a $100 bill on the path!"
"No, you are mistaken," the wiser head replied. "That cannot be. If there
were actually a $100 bill, someone would have picked it up."
Inflation allows you to live in a more expensive neigbourhood without moving.
Government's view of the economy could be summed up in a few short phrases:
If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving,
subsidise it.
Feudalism: You have two cows. Your lord takes some
of the milk.
Socialism: You have two cows. State takes one and
gives it to someone else.
Communism: You have two cows. State takes both of
them and gives you as much milk as you need.
Bureaucratic Communism: You have two cows. State
takes both of them and gives you as much milk as the regulations say you
should need.
Bureaucracy: You have two cows. State regulates
what you can feed them and when you can milk them. Then it pays you not to
milk them. After that it takes both cows, shoots one, milks the other and
pours the milk down the drain. Then it requires you to fill out forms
accounting for the missing cows.
Fascism: You have two cows. State takes both of
them and sells you milk.
Nazism: You have two cows. State takes both of
them and shoots you.
Liberalism: You have two cows. State dosen't care
whether you exist, let alone your cows.
Capitalism: You have two cows. You sell one and
buy a bull.
How economists do it...
Economists do it cyclically.
Economists do it on demand.
Economists do it with models.
Economists do it with crystal balls.
How many economists does it take to change a light bulb?
None. If it really needed changing, market forces would
have caused it to happen.
None. If the government would just leave it alone, it
would screw itself in.
None. The invisible hand does it.
Two. One to assume the existence of ladder and one to
change the bulb.
Eight. One to change it and seven to hold everything
else constant.
One to prepare the proposal, an econometrician to run the
model, one each MS and PhD students to write the theses and dissertations,
two more to prepare the journal article (senior authorship not assigned),
four to review it, and at least as many to refine the model and replicate
the results.
More jokes, complaints, Coke Light? Send it to David Shay
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