That we should in general be suspicious of things we see in the news, online or printed, is true. We do, after all, have all that fake news floating around. But there is also the point that the newspapers tend to be written by the arts graduates. Those with no basic grounding in numbers, no sense of proportion over what might be true or possible. Thus we get, often enough, assertions which simply cannot be true. Such as this idea that Amazon is half of all retail sales. But this is what is being said:
A new report from digital marketing research firm eMarketer indicates that the Silicon Valley giant is expected to capture a whopping 49.1% of the US retail market by the end of 2018.
Err, no, really, just no. We’re not going to have one company handling 50% of retail sales, jut not going to happen. If we got anywhere close to that there would be, despite the impossibility, antitrust action to make sure it didn’t.
Amazon on track to capture nearly HALF of US retail market by the end of 2018, research shows
Amazon is on track to grab almost half of the US retail market by the end of 2018
Just no. So where did this come from? Ah, here:
Amazon is set to clear $258.22 billion in US retail sales in 2018, according to eMarketer’s figures, which will work out to 49.1 percent of all online retail spend in the country, and 5 percent of all retail sales.
50% of online retail sales and 50% of retail sales are really rather different things. Like, say, an order of magnitude apart? People should instinctively get this difference, there should be an alarm bell that goes off when anyone thinks they’re the same. But then, you know, we’re dealing with numbers and those arts graduates.
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As well as economics stories written by arts majors, consider the same thing when arts majors are set up to write about a given topic by lobbyists because a related bill has been moved in the legislature — say, a bill that would make Amazon's operations more difficult.
I don't know that this is the basis for this sloppy reporting, but Trump has certainly spent time questioning Amazon's dominance of its field, plus its "sweetheart deal" with the US Postal System, because its owner also owns the Washington Post, which attacks him on a daily basis. When the President does such a thing, it establishes a meme, and writing a story that reinforces readers' memes gets you on Page One or a lot of clicks. So sometimes it is not simply innocent ignorance.
But... but... it's been said over and over that economics is more of an art than a science...
But... but... it's been said over and over that economics is more of an art than a science...