Volume 25 Issue 4 (October-December 2009)

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Special section: Decision making and planning under low levels of predictability
edited by Spyros Makridakis, Nassim Taleb

System economics: Overcoming the pitfalls of forecasting models via a multidisciplinary approach

Orrell, D. , McSharry, P.
Pages 734-743
Abstract

In areas from medicine to climate change to economics, we are faced with huge challenges and a need for accurate forecasts, yet our ability to predict the future has been found wanting. The basic problem is that complex systems such as the atmosphere or the economy can not be reduced to simple mathematical laws and modeled accordingly. The equations in numerical models are therefore only approximations to reality, and are often highly sensitive to external influences and small changes in parameterisation - they can be made to fit past data, but are less good at prediction. Since decisions are usually based on our best models of the future, how can we proceed? This paper draws a comparison between two apparently different fields: biology and economics. In biology, drug development is a highly inefficient and expensive process, which in the past has relied heavily on trial and error. Institutions such as pharmaceutical companies and universities are now radically changing their approach and adopting techniques from the new field of systems biology to integrate information from disparate sources and improve the development process. A similar revolution is required in economics if models are to reflect the nature of human economic activity and provide useful tools for policy makers. We outline the main foundations for a theory of systems economics.

Keywords: Uncertainty , Decision making , Financial markets , Systems biology , Forecasting practice
FULL TEXT LINK
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijforecast.2009.05.002
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