Bryan Caplan summarizes some evidence.

One of the first things that stands out is anti-foreign bias. When they contemplate economic interaction with foreigners, the general public gets unreasonably negative…

A second major pattern in the public’s economic illiteracy is make-work bias…In the long-run, blaming technology for unemployment is just silly. As the mechanization of agriculture beautifully illustrates, when machines replace people in one line of work, they switch to another…

a blanket anti-market bias…In the minds of public, prices apparently go up when businesses suddenly start to feel greedier. Economists, in contrast, expect businesses to be greedy year-in, year-out; but depending on market conditions, greed may call for prices to go up, go down, or stay the same…

A final catch-all category of economic illiteracy may be called pessimistic bias. Conventional wisdom has it that conditions are going from bad to worse. Most Americans think that real income has been falling for decades, most new jobs are low-paying, and doubt whether the next generation will have a higher standard of living. Economists think that this conventional wisdom is dead wrong.

Meanwhile, James E. Zull says that errors are an opportunity for learning.

learning produces physical change in the brain…

When we practice something, the neurons that control and drive that action fire repeatedly. If a neuron fires frequently, iit grows and extends itself out toward other neurons…Particularly in the cortex, neurons that fire more frequently will also reach out more frequently…

we need more than just activity–we need emotion…when we solve a problem, we have feelings of pleasure and satisfaction. Or when we cannot understand a calculus or biochemistry text, we have feelings of frustration and despair…

rather than treating student errors as obstacles to learning, I began to welcome them…

I saw student errors as clues for teaching. Errors identify gaps in student [neural] networks and provide ideas for how to build those networks.

For Discussion. What errors that non-economists make are not explained by Caplan’s list of biases?