Economists Baffled: Business Continues To Exist
Reports emerging from the esteemed halls of economic prognostication indicate a profound state of bewilderment. Despite the most intricate algorithmic projections and the deployment of countless spreadsheet tabs, the age-old practice of individuals exchanging goods and services for monetary compensation – quaintly known as 'business' – appears to be… ongoing.
Sources close to the perplexed academia suggest that this baffling persistence of commerce has caused many a graph to flatline in shock. It seems the expectation was that at some point, after sufficient quantitative easing and global financial acrobatics, the market economy might simply, well, *stop*. Yet, inexplicably, shops remain open, invoices are still being dispatched, and consumers, in a truly audacious display of societal participation, continue to require items like artisanal sourdough and smartphone upgrades. This stubborn adherence to rudimentary transactional behaviours is, frankly, rude to anyone attempting to model a world where profit margins spontaneously implode. One senior analyst at the International Monetary Fund was reportedly heard muttering about the 'sheer impudence of it all.' It seems the world of economics has much to learn from… actual life.
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