Kyla Scanlon rose to some prominence during and after the pandemic, through her short explanatory videos about the economy, money, and finance. She may not have been the first, but certainly is one of the most prominent members of the #EconTok community on TikTok (as well as being active on other social media as well). Certainly, she has developed a large following, particularly among younger people. So, I was really interested to read her 2024 book, In This Economy.
I have to say that I was quite disappointed though. On the plus side, Scanlon plays to her strengths, and the early parts of the book are strong on exploring the role of vibes on the economy (Scanlon coined the term 'vibecession', to mean "a period of temporary vibe decline during which economic data such as trade and industrial activity are okay-ish"). Those chapters are generally good (although see my later comments). However, significant parts of chapters are less explainers about "how money and markets really work", which is the subtitle for the book, and more a commentary on current US policy on housing, immigration, clean energy, and the like. This is not just apparent in the final chapter, which is supposed to be more policy focused. The parts of the book where Scanlon held forth on her views were far less compelling to me, because the role of vibes was largely forgotten. It would have been more interesting to know how vibes may play a role in housing policy, or immigration policy, and whether a change in vibes might change policy. The book could have been tightened up significantly, and made an interesting contribution that other authors are less well equipped to make.
What put me off most though, were the inaccuracies in the book. The worst offence (to a New Zealand economist) was this, about inflation targeting:
That's because the 2 percent figure is sort of random. The idea originally came from Arthur Grimes, the Labour Party finance minster [sic] of New Zealand in the 1980s. He went on TV and said, "Two percent should be our inflation target," and now everybody goes after that magic number.
Arthur Grimes was never an MP, let alone finance minister (I checked this with him!). Scanlon might owe Arthur an apology for confusing him with Roger Douglas. One of my colleagues ventured that perhaps ChatGPT wrote those sentences. It is the sort of hallucination we might expect from an LLM, but who knows if that was the source. Sadly, it is indicative of the inaccuracies in the book. Consider this one:
In one example of the extremity of market moves, the yield on thirty-year U.K. inflation-linked bonds jumped by more than 250% (meaning that they fell 250% in price) after the Bank made the announcement that it was not going to intervene.
If something falls in price by more than 100 percent, that means that the seller pays the buyer to buy it from them. The correct figure here should be 60 percent I think, not 250 percent. Similarly:
So when news headlines say, "Inflation Rate Falls to 3 Percent," that doesn't mean that prices fell three percent; it just means that the rate of change of price increases fell three percent.
No, it means that the rate of change of prices fell to three percent (from whatever it was before). There is unfortunately a lot of this sort of lack of attention to detail. At one point, Scanlon provides an estimate of GDP for the 'Gingerbread Yeti economy', then converts it to 'real nominal GDP' by dividing by one plus the current year's inflation rate. First, there's no such thing as 'real nominal GDP'. There is 'nominal GDP' and there is 'real GDP'. And second, the calculation does provide a measure of real GDP, measured in terms of dollars from the year before. However, the calculation that is presented gives the impression that dividing by one plus the current year's inflation rate is the standard way of calculating real GDP. It isn't. It's not just the current year's inflation that matters in calculating real GDP, but the inflation in every year between the current year and the base year. The base year matters, and the base year is not always the year before the current year.
Despite my grumpiness, there are some good aspects to the book. Scanlon does have a good way with words that I think connects with younger people (and that much is clear from her success on social media). She also provides some interesting examples to illustrate her explanations, such as the 'economics kingdom' (which illustrates how parts of the economy are related), the 'cake of uncertainty' (which relates expectations, theory, and reality), and the aforementioned 'Gingerbread Yeti economy'. Scanlon also refers to a lot of memes, probably many more than I would recognise. And yet I found the explanation of how 'meme stocks' worked to be a bit underdone.
Sadly, I don't think I can recommend this book, even to my younger students who might connect with the contemporary material more than they would with earlier pop economics books. There are simply too many bits where I worry that the book would steer them wrong. Normally, I find that Tyler Cowen makes excellent book recommendations. In this case, I'm really not seeing whatever he saw in this one.

