I asked her the amount of Economics she had studied, to get that degree. She answered none, nada, zip.
Probably a good thing, the way economics is taught these days.
I was an "emergency substitute" teacher while I was studying for Masters of Education. They were desperate for substitutes so they'd quick-train anyone with a baccalaureate degree and give emergency certification.
There were rarely any science positions open, so I'd fill in other positions, figuring I'd be better than just having the kids do a study hall.
I once subbed for a social studies teacher...and then found out he taught Honors Level Senior Economics. I've never had an economics class myself...but I am a scholar, so I knew how to teach myself the lesson quickly. The lesson was price controls. Turns out,
the teacher had taken out everything in the block plan that was negative about price controls, leaving only how great they are.
So, I figured, "what are they gonna do...fire me?" and quickly taught the lesson as he left it. I'm a very good teacher, so I was able to effectively cover the material in only part of the time period. The remainder of the period, I set up a role-playing scenario, where kids near the windows were at the Gulf Coast and needed generators for air conditioning, while the students across the room were up north where there were generators. I then told them how much it would cost to transport the generators, and they saw how few would deliver them generators unless the price could go up. Those that raised the price got to open the window next to their seats (this was late in the spring and the classroom was hot, and none of this new air-conditioned stuff!).
But I know that was the ONLY bit of the other side they ever saw...because I went beyond what I was supposed to do, one day out of their year. The rest of the time, they got the typical leftist trash they always get...and no balancing side.