Call me the duplicator: See a graph, make a graph.
Look up Okun's Law, and this graph comes up:
Graph #1: Okun's Law. Source: Wikipedia |
Here's what I got:
Graph #2: Okun's Law at FRED |
I even got blue dots! My dots are all the same color, all faint blue. Some of them look dark because they overlap. There are more dots in the middle of the cluster than elsewhere, and they overlap and it makes them look dark blue. If you look at the first graph, there are more dots in the middle of the cluster there, too.
So that's what I saw when I looked at my graph. And then I noticed something odd: My dots are all arranged in columns, with blank space between the columns. You probably noticed it before I did. It's like unemployment always makes a quantum leap from one level to the next, as you go from left to right.
The other graph doesn't show that.
No, I know what it is: FRED rounded the unemployment numbers to one decimal place. You can see it, from the way the columns are spaced. And sure enough, if you hover over the graph at FRED it shows the unemployment values rounded to one decimal place.
Damn, I thought I was on to something with "quantum" unemployment!
2 comments:
Quantum jumping to conclusions!
Good one, Philip!
My wife says "It's not a scatter plot any more!"
Post a Comment