By John Fund
Tuesday, September 30, 2025
The Trump administration made its case in court last week
that the president has the
right to fire sitting Federal Reserve board member Lisa Cook because of
ethical misconduct on her mortgage contracts.
It shouldn’t be controversial to argue that someone who
has committed mortgage fraud should be disqualified from serving on a board
that has oversight over mortgage policy. But more than 500 academics have
rushed to Cook’s defense by signing a letter stating that she should stay on the
job.
Really? These academics are so ideologically chained to
the left — or hate Trump so passionately — that they don’t see an ethical
violation here? They act as though mortgage-application fraud — a major cause
of the 2008 housing-market collapse — is akin to having overdue books checked
out at the library.
In 2021, Casey Mulligan and Tomas Philipson, two
economists who were fellows at Unleash Prosperity, detailed the dismal record of fact-free group opinions
signed by economists supporting Joe Biden’s economic policies.
These experts’ “open letters” predicted that the federal
student loan program would make money for the government, that Obamacare would
dramatically reduce health care costs, and that redistribution and using more
costly energy sources would increase economic growth. Dead wrong on all counts.
It seems every day brings another “open letter” from a
group of economists or other experts weighing in on some political issue. Last
year, 23 winners of the Nobel Prize in Economics endorsed Kamala Harris’s tax
and spending plans over those of Donald Trump.
Such letters are often theatrical versions of political
position papers rather than any attempt to educate the public. That’s no
surprise, because they often come from highly liberal, tenured professors who,
shocker alert, oppose all conservative policies.
Many of the experts who sign open leaders have clearly
not read the bills they comment on. Their opinions are often outside their area
of expertise, which is like having your psychiatrist perform heart surgery. And
having largely left-wing professors comment on Trump is like having Coke
comment on Pepsi.
In the run-up to Britain’s successful 2016 referendum on
leaving the European Union, Britain’s Justice Secretary Michael Gove touched a
populist nerve when he broke with his own Conservative Prime Minister David
Cameron and backed Brexit. After being told that expert opinion was predicting
a collapse of the British economy if Brexit passed, Gove replied, “I think the
people of this country have had enough of experts with organisations with
acronyms saying that they know what is best and getting it consistently wrong.”
The “experts” were naturally furious at his comments, but
Gove spoke for large swaths of the population who had come to distrust experts.
They had become skeptical specifically of economists who appeared unable to
come up with forecasts that turn out to be even roughly right. After Brexit
passed, there was no recession in Britain; indeed, there was not even a
slowdown in growth.
Richard Portes of the London Business School admits that
“the reputation of experts has suffered because they are seen as reinforcing
the elite: as the elite has come under attack from populist quarters, so
experts have suffered the same fate.”
Experts who publish in academic journals insist that
their research standards are more rigorous than the general public believes.
They say their papers go through peer review, a process by which submissions to
academic journals are scrutinized by academic peers of the authors — the
“referees.” Only papers deemed suitable by referees are published.
But the process is riddled with problems, errors in how
referees are selected, and conflicts of interest. Once a paper is published,
the chances of its being subjected to further scrutiny are remote. So, all too
often, there is no post-publication challenge by anyone affiliated with a
university, and no one from outside has the ability to challenge the findings.
No wonder many people view the “experts” as a secretive priesthood that plays a
rigged game with the facts.
There is no easy solution to the problem of so much
“expert” opinion being viewed as “junk science.” But a start could be made by
those experts who worry that their standing in the broader community has taken
a hit. One way to build back some of that lost respect would be for experts to
resist the temptation to comment outside their area of direct expertise.
Someone who pledged to do just that might start earning a reputation for
exercising . . . expert judgment.
No comments:
Post a Comment