Some economists argue that it will take years to recover from the worldwide collapse we're facing.
Some economists argue that the pattern actually benefits both the US and China.
Some economists argue that America's economy has such huge imbalances that its recent rapid growth will prove unsustainable.
Some economists argue that a shortfall in the legal protection granted to innovators means there is not enough innovation.
Some economists argue that those countries should learn from Chile's open market economy, tight banking supervision and capital controls.
Some economists argue this makes no sense, despite the fear of a loss of pricing power to a Chinese monopsony.
ECONOMIST: A tug of war between commercial logic and popular sentiment
Some economists argue that rising share prices can also lead to higher spending by households that own few shares or none.
In fact, so ingrained is the aversion to inflation, that some economists argue that the credibility of central bankers is the problem.
Some economists argue that the bank made a rod for its own back in the way it chose to define price stability.
Some economists argue that recessions result in a permanent loss of output.
Some economists argue for a break-up of the country's socialist housing system.
But some economists argue that when rich countries traded mainly with other rich countries the U.S. with Germany, for instance they specialized, but didn't compete on wages.
Some economists argue that if Mr Darling's stimulus is not enough to turn around the economy, he will need a further stimulus package in the Budget.
Its price has been further lifted by investors using it has a hedge against inflation, which some economists argue will be re-ignited by quantitative easing policies.
Indeed, some economists argue that America's relatively debtor-friendly bankruptcy laws explain why it has a more entrepreneurial culture than countries where the law provides greater protection to creditors.
Some economists argue that as China gets richer it needs to allow its real exchange rate to rise, in order to reap the full gains of its economic success.
Some economists argue that because people are more aware of the payroll tax cut than they were of the obscure MWP, they are more likely to spend the extra dollars.
FORBES: Payroll Tax Holiday: Better Than Nothing, But Still Not Very Good
This is why some economists argue that a little bit of inflation, say 3%, is a useful lubricant for relative wage adjustment, because it makes it easier to disguise real wage cuts.
ECONOMIST: Does your company really need an annual pay round?
However, some economists argue that a higher inflation rate is actually exactly what is needed in the eurozone, in order to help Italian and other workers regain their competitive advantage against German workers.
Some economists argue that quantitative easing had little effect, because the policy of injecting lots of liquidity into the financial system did not succeed in its stated goal of persuading banks to lend more.
ECONOMIST: It is time for the yen to climb and the dollar to fall
But some economists argue that Brazil is the beneficiary of a structural shift, in which the industrialisation of Asia and the rise of a new middle class in the developing world will keep commodity prices high.
And while that may sound good for bargain hunters, and perhaps even more importantly for Japan's ageing households receiving fixed pension incomes, if prices continue to fall for a prolonged period, it actually has a negative psychological and business effect, some economists argue.
Some economists argue plausibly that signs of slowing consumer spending are already apparent: Simon Briscoe, an economist at Nikko Europe, a securities firm, points out that a whole host of economic variables, from car registrations to retail sales, are weaker than they were six months ago.
Some economists now argue for an inflation target of more than 2 percent to stimulate nominal income growth.
FORBES: Bernanke Administers Another Cruel Dose Of Financial Morphine With QE3
Some economists also argue that people who have delayed replacing big-ticket items like air conditioners and dishwashers aren't likely to hold out much longer and could soon start buying.
Some economists, such as Paul Krugman, argue that the problem is not too much, but too little economic stimulus spending.
FORBES: Government Policy Restrains An Economic Recovery Launched By The 2008 Recession
NAFTA. Some prominent Mexican economists, such as Francisco Gil Diaz, argue that the country would benefit from monetary union with the United States.
But some economists, including former White House economic adviser Jared Bernstein, argue that if temporary measures are put in place to avoid an economic downturn, there is a greater chance to work out a long-term solution that necessarily will follow some of the methods chosen by California.
BBC: Can Washington learn from Californian budget compromise?
Some economists, such as Klas Eklund at Skandinaviska Enskilda Banken, argue that Sweden's economy is in step with Europe, that interest rates set by the European Central Bank would suit it, and that the country would gain from a stable currency, more trade, higher growth and bigger markets within the euro zone.
Why are some folks able to make huge returns in the stock market, if as economists argue there is no systematic way to make above average returns?
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