I guess it is down to Tyler’s personal opinion, but would he accept asking IR and defense policy experts on the chance of a war with China as an acceptable strategy or would he insist on mathematical models of their behaviors and responses? To me it’s clearly the wrong tool, just as in the climate impacts literature we can’t get economic models of e.g. how governments might respond to waves of climate refugees but can consult experts on it.
I guess it is down to Tyler’s personal opinion, but would he accept asking IR and defense policy experts on the chance of a war with China as an acceptable strategy or would he insist on mathematical models of their behaviors and responses? To me it’s clearly the wrong tool, just as in the climate impacts literature we can’t get economic models of e.g. how governments might respond to waves of climate refugees but can consult experts on it.
I just think that to an economist, models and survey results are different things, and he’s not asking for the latter.