Heather Long
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
So the question then really focuses on how do we help students develop expertise?
Both disciplinary expertise, but alongside that, AI skills that use AI as a complement to their own thinking.
Exactly.
Yeah, I think so.
You know, one of the nice things about macroeconomics writ large is that you can ask the same questions, but you have different answers depending on what's going on in the economy, right?
And who the economists are.
That's right.
That's right.
So it's not just one course or one professor doing this, right?
It's a matter of students getting regular exposure, regular practice, reflection, and
feedback, to really hone their skills about how to really effectively use AI as a partner in their thinking.
So my hope is that this course can be part of that, a start to that.
Great, thanks.
It's been great talking with you.
Yes, that's the big question. I'm on a scale of 1 to 10. I'm probably somewhere around a 5 or 6 now, which is way higher. If we had this conversation in January, I think I would have been like a 2. So it just shows you how much it's jumped up. You can pick your favorite economist. I think JP Morgan put the recession odds at 40%. Larry Summers was at 50%.
Yes, that's the big question. I'm on a scale of 1 to 10. I'm probably somewhere around a 5 or 6 now, which is way higher. If we had this conversation in January, I think I would have been like a 2. So it just shows you how much it's jumped up. You can pick your favorite economist. I think JP Morgan put the recession odds at 40%. Larry Summers was at 50%.
Yes, that's the big question. I'm on a scale of 1 to 10. I'm probably somewhere around a 5 or 6 now, which is way higher. If we had this conversation in January, I think I would have been like a 2. So it just shows you how much it's jumped up. You can pick your favorite economist. I think JP Morgan put the recession odds at 40%. Larry Summers was at 50%.
Goldman Sachs still pretty conservative around 20 to 25%. But everyone agrees the recession risks have really gone up.
Goldman Sachs still pretty conservative around 20 to 25%. But everyone agrees the recession risks have really gone up.
Goldman Sachs still pretty conservative around 20 to 25%. But everyone agrees the recession risks have really gone up.