Editing 2892: Banana Prices
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==Explanation== | ==Explanation== | ||
− | + | {{incomplete|Created by a MANDALORIAN BANANA ARMORER - Please change this comment when editing this page.}} | |
− | + | [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nl_Qyk9DSUw ‘It’s one banana, Michael. What could it cost, $10?'] is a line from an {{w|Arrested Development}} episode (Season 1, Episode 6, "Charity Drive", 2003) that became well known as a meme used to mock out-of-touch elites. The character who spoke this line—Lucille Bluth, a rich socialite—didn't know the cost of a banana and made a wildly incorrect estimate because she had never bought her own groceries. According to the graph, the banana price at the time of that episode was actually just under 25 cents, and the price "now" (2024) is around 30 cents. | |
− | The | + | This comic illustrates a number of ways to violate statistical best practices and to "lie with data." The additional use of an "unreliable narrator" device gives this comic several layers of meaning. The caption writer, in this case, is an unreliable narrator who is ''also'' humorously out-of-touch like Lucille Bluth, but in a different way. The comic speculates that the error in their conclusion is less than 10%, even when their own three predictions (from 120 years to 220 years) differ by over 80%. |
− | + | To initially mislead the reader and to ultimately demonstrate how easy it is to be fooled by various methods of "lying with data," Randall ably combines several statistical "sins" in one graph, such as: | |
+ | * false [[Precision vs Accuracy|precision]] | ||
+ | * [[Extrapolating|extrapolating]] an order of magnitude deeper into the future than is advisable | ||
+ | * referring to a logarithmic extrapolation as linear | ||
+ | * ignoring historical norms and high variability in making future predictions | ||
+ | * articulating multiple potential scenarios that are actually highly correlated with each other | ||
− | + | At first, the comic looks like a wry observation that the irony of this sitcom line will "probably" be obsolete in a century or two. This comic shows a graph of three, predicted prices for bananas over the next 250 years, extrapolating from the current price. One uses the general inflation rate, a value dominated by the cost of housing. Another uses the more specific inflation rate for fresh fruit. The final line is an extrapolation from 50 years of historic banana prices. The comic seems to say that it will take a century or two before the irony of the sitcom quote becomes anachronistically meaningless. | |
− | + | (While these extrapolations look linear, they are, in fact, exponential, since a linear extrapolation on a graph with a logarithmic scale is actually an exponential extrapolation. The graph is log-linear, with price as a logarithmic scale on the vertical (left) axis, which makes it possible to visualize exponential growth as a straight line.) | |
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− | + | The accuracy of this prediction depends on these particular extrapolations being valid. The "general inflation rate" line assumes an average rate of around 3%, matching the historic average in the USA. However, assuming a constant inflation rate for the next 200 years is extremely simplistic. Inflation fluctuates quite a lot in response to economic factors and government policies. It was as high as 6% during recent rounds of economic stimulus and caused fears of hyper-inflation. And pre-Covid, it was around 1% for a decade. | |
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+ | Besides getting the inflation rate wrong, another way the extrapolation could be wrong was if—in the next 100 years—there were a {{w|Banana#Pests, diseases, and natural disasters|massive banana crash or extinction}}, as has {{w|Gros Michel banana|happened before}}, due to the banana's lack of genetic diversity. In which case, the sharply reduced supply of bananas could send the price past $10 very quickly. | ||
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+ | (Two elements of finance that grow exponentially—but are traditionally plotted on linear graphs—are compound interest and investment growth in stock markets.) | ||
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+ | Another, more subtle, illustration of false precision is the graph's use of three different models for the extrapolation of banana prices. At first glance, using three different trend lines seems to show a "range" of potential scenarios and acknowledge the prediction's uncertainty. (Scenario Thinking is the practice of articulating divergent, uncorrelated scenarios to explore various "potential futures.") However, the three underlying trends of the prediction models are correlated: general inflation is highly correlated to fruit price inflation and banana price inflation. Using three different trends that are all highly correlated is scant better than using just one. | ||
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+ | Finally, the reference to "BLS/St. Louis Fred"—a widely respected source of economic data—appears to lend credibility to the graph, but the only data that is truly credible is the historic price data. It's one more example—citing respected sources—of a way to show how to fool unsuspecting readers into lending a prediction more credibility than it deserves. | ||
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+ | The title text is a wink from Randall about this unreliable narrator by using the ignorant tone of Lucille Bluth to wryly acknowledge, in fact, that error of the extrapolations greatly exceeds 10%. Just as Lucille was very wrong about a $10 banana (a price threshold), so, too, is the speaker of the title text very wrong about the 10% error (a proportional change). It does so in the form of a meta-joke about the false precision of extrapolations, while continuing the theme of the speaker's extreme ignorance. Assuming that the error couldn't be more than 10% shows that the Lucille speaker continues to be hilariously off-base, presuming far more accuracy from a multi-century prediction than is warranted. | ||
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+ | Overall, the comic is a clever commentary about the false precision of extrapolation and how easy it is to make absurdly precise predictions seem credible, illustrating its point by initially misleading the reader with its own false precision, and wrapping it all in a pop-culture reference. | ||
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+ | In truth, any economic extrapolation into the distant future (based on past data points) is just an educated guess, likely to be quite wrong, with an expected error far in excess of 10%. (A rare example of a field in which 75-year predictions are highly accurate is demographic age charts, since the number of babies born this year is causal of the number of 75-year-olds alive in 75 years.) | ||
This comic uses several common xkcd themes: | This comic uses several common xkcd themes: | ||
* '''Log scales''' and their peculiarities are a recurring xkcd theme, and this is the second comic in a row to play with logarithms (the prior one being [[2891: Log Cabin]]). | * '''Log scales''' and their peculiarities are a recurring xkcd theme, and this is the second comic in a row to play with logarithms (the prior one being [[2891: Log Cabin]]). | ||
* It's also the second comic in the last four to involve '''predictions across centuries''' (i.e. [[2889: Greenhouse Effect]]). | * It's also the second comic in the last four to involve '''predictions across centuries''' (i.e. [[2889: Greenhouse Effect]]). | ||
− | * ''' | + | * Another '''extrapolation''' comic include [[605: Extrapolating]]. This comic looks a lot like [[1007: Sustainable]]. |
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==Transcript== | ==Transcript== | ||
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[[Category:Fiction]] | [[Category:Fiction]] | ||
[[Category:Extrapolation]] | [[Category:Extrapolation]] | ||
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