You definitely didn't read the study then. You appear to have glanced over their main section on their findings (that did include political predictions), and completely missed the section where they talked about possible confounds and the methods they took to control them, which is where I quoted from. You will notice they ran the regressions both with, and without political predictions, and still found a statistically significant effect. Before you start LOLing, you should probably know what you're talking about.
What do you mean it doesn't prove it? I don't even know what you're trying to argue. In your previous post you said it appeared that Republicans were being penalized for predicting their side would win. The authors of the study say that even when political predictions are removed, the statistical significance remained. Are you claiming they are lying? Are you seriously looking to personally go through every prediction they analyzed to see if they meet your personal standard for what constitutes a political prediction? Also for your 'apples to oranges' comparison, are you attempting to argue that people are more likely to be correct on economic issues than political ones? What are you basing this idea on?
This is a measure of pundits in general, not of political ones or of economic ones. Oddly enough, you read the part where they specifically mentioned his economic credentials probably helped him, and then drew somehow a negative conclusion about the study from that. (this is baffling) As to how he compares to other economists, he outperformed the Chairman of the Federal Reserve.
Even moreso, who cares? People said Krugman was wrong a lot. Some people looked at his predictions over a year period and found during this time he was right a whole lot more than he was wrong. Since we don't seem to have any other actual studies, just people hand waving, it seems relevant.
Yes I do want to see their data and how they interpreted it? Is that too much to ask? Especially since in some cases there were only 17 predictions. That is how social science would normally be done. The data is more important than the analysis. The fact that you can't understand that tells me it's not worth discussing this further. You can keep thinking this study somehow proves Krugman is a good source of authority...
