All posts by Jim Garven

My name is Jim Garven. I currently hold appointments at Baylor University as the Frank S. Groner Memorial Chair of Finance and Professor of Finance & Insurance. I also currently serve as an associate editor for Geneva Risk and Insurance Review. At Baylor, I teach courses in managerial economics, risk management, and financial engineering, and my research interests are in corporate risk management, insurance economics, and option pricing theory and applications. Please email your comments about this weblog to James_Garven@baylor.edu.

Assorted Links (1/15/2012)

Here’s a list of articles and videos that I have been reading and viewing lately:

The Truth About Bain and Jobs

online.wsj.com

Quoting from this article, “…the best antidote to foolish thinking about job creation is the work of economists Steven J. Davis and John Haltiwanger. Their painstaking research has revealed a side of America’s dynamism that isn’t always pretty. Between 1977 and 2005, years roughly overlapping Mr. Romney’s business career, some 15% of all jobs were destroyed every year, even as total jobs grew by an average of 2% a year. Job creation and destruction are both relentless, the authors showed in paper after paper. The small difference between the two is what we call prosperity.”

Fascinated by Tim Tebow on More Than Sundays

www.nytimes.com

“What, exactly, is it about Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow that so fascinates and provokes us? Why do some people project onto him the best of this country — and the worst?”

The Artist (2011)

www.imdb.com

“Directed by Michel Hazanavicius. With Jean Dujardin, Bérénice Bejo, John Goodman, James Cromwell. Hollywood, 1927: As silent movie star George Valentin wonders if the arrival of talking pictures will cause him to fade into oblivion, he sparks with Peppy Miller, a young dancer set for a big break.”

Dear Student: I Don’t Lie Awake At Night Thinking of Ways to Ruin Your Life

www.forbes.com

“Your professors don’t hate you, and they aren’t out to get you. Now that this is out of the way, let’s have a great semester.”

Why the Left Is Losing the Argument over the Financial Crisis

www.american.com

“Fair-minded people are persuaded by facts, not invective.”

The Mathematics of Magic

www.freakonomics.com

“I don’t particularly like math. I’ve never been a fan of magic either. For some reason, however, when I heard about a new book entitled Magical Mathematics written by two first-rate mathematicians, Persi Diaconis and Ron Graham, I felt compelled to buy it and read it.”

How Private Equity Works

professional.wsj.com

The author of this thoughtful and well researched article is Jonathan Macey, who is a professor of corporate law, corporate finance and securities law at Yale Law School. Professor Macey provides a very clear and succinct explanation of what the role of “private equity” is in a free market economy (hint: it ISN’T what Rick Perry and others say it is).  Quoting from this article, “…Jonathan Macey notes that the alternative to the leaner, smaller firms created by private equity are bankrupt firms that don’t employ anybody.”

Ron Paul’s achievement

www.washingtonpost.com

“Bringing his cause in from the fringe.”

How Fannie, Freddie and Politicians Caused the Crisis

www.realclearmarkets.com

Quoting from this article, “Government housing policies and the toxic mortgages they spawned were the sine qua non of the financial crisis.”

George Orwell’s Animal Farm

www.farnamstreetblog.com

“Animated (72 minute) Feature of George Orwell’s anti-totalitarian novella Animal Farm.”

Elizabeth Warren’s Sloppy Progressivism

www.hoover.org

Interesting quotes from this article by NYU law professor Richard Epstein: 1) “Warren wants to reduce the role of the entrepreneur in society.” 2) “Laissez-faire capitalism requires an effective and focused government.” and 3) “Time after time, Warren embraces coercion over cooperation.”

Class Warfare and the Buffett Rule

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Arthur B. Laffer writes that implementing a surtax on ‘millionaires’ would hurt just about everyone but the super rich like Warren Buffett.”

Assorted Links (1/7/2012)

Here’s a list of articles that I have been reading lately:

Government: The redistributionist behemoth

www.washingtonpost.com

Quoting from George Will’s most recent Washington Post column, “Try a thought experiment suggested decades ago by University of Chicago law professors Walter Blum and Harry Kalven in their 1952 essay “The Uneasy Case for Progressive Taxation,” published in their university’s law review. Suppose society’s wealth trebled overnight without any change in the relative distribution among individuals. Would the unchanged inequality at higher levels of affluence decrease concern about inequality? Surely not: The issue of inequality has become more salient as affluence has increased. Which suggests two conclusions: People are less dissatisfied by what they lack than by what others have. And when government engages in redistribution in order to maximize the happiness of citizens who become more envious as they become more comfortable, government becomes increasingly frenzied and futile.”

A Youngster’s Bright Idea Is Something New Under the Sun; Scientist Is 13-Year-Old Aidan Dwyer

professional.wsj.com

“A new way of collecting solar energy has polarized scientists around the world and ignited fierce debate on the Internet, where the innovator in question has been called everything from an alien to the agent of a global conspiracy. The scientist is 13 years old.”

The Cancer Revolution

professional.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal reports that survival rates are rising, but new drugs are delayed by 1950s’ trial design.”

The President’s Risky Defense Strategy

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Mackubin Thomas Owens writes that reducing ground forces and focusing on the Asia-Pacific region leaves the United States exposed to unanticipated threats.”

The 27 Rules of Conquering the Gym

professional.wsj.com

“Sweating is a good way to begin 2012. But if you’re going to join a gym—or returning to the gym after a long hibernation—consider the following.”

Belmont & Fishtown by Charles Murray – The New Criterion

www.newcriterion.com

Quoting from this article, ““…a growing proportion of the people who run the institutions of our country have… always lived in upper-middle-class neighborhoods and gone to upper-middle-class schools. Many have never worked at a job that caused a body part to hurt at the end of the day, never had a conversation with an evangelical Christian, never seen a factory floor, never had a friend who didn’t have a college degree, never hunted or fished. They are likely to know that Garrison Keillor’s monologue on Prairie Home Companion is the source of the phrase “all of the children are above average,” but they have never walked on a prairie and never known someone well whose IQ actually was below average.”

The Constitution is Clear on Recess Appointments

www.advancingafreesociety.org

This is a brilliant constitutional exegesis by NYU law professor Richard Epstein on recess appointments; well worth reading!

Obama’s Reckless Recess Ploy

professional.wsj.com

“David Rivkin and Lee Casey write in The Wall Street Journal that no president has resorted to recess appointments when Congress is in session—so we can expect serious legal challenges to new financial regulations.”

Gingrich and the History of Negative Campaigns

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, John Steele Gordon writes that negative ads can intensify an existing perception of a candidate. They can seldom create one.”

Where to Put Your Money in 2012

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Burton Malkiel writes that U.S. stocks should produce returns of about 7% going forward, five points higher than the yield on safe bonds.”

For young graduates, the case for economics

www.washingtonpost.com

Quoting from this article, “…”economics is organized common sense,” as Tom Sargent, this year’s winner of the Nobel Prize, remembers …the teaching assistant who inspired him to take up economics saying.”

2012: Marking the New Year

www.boston.com

“Around the world people celebrated with fireworks, kisses, blessings, gatherings, cheers, watching the sunrise and plunges into icy bodies of water to welcome in a new year. Here’s a look back at how some of them marked the transition.”

Here’s why I love ‘greed,’ and so should you

washingtonexaminer.com

“What human motivation gets the most wonderful things done? It’s really a silly question, because the answer is so simple. It turns out that it’s human greed that gets the most wonderful things done.”

Assorted Links (1/4/2012)

Here’s a list of articles that I have been reading lately:

Dave Barry’s 2011 Year in Review

www.miamiherald.com

Dave Barry’s “Year in Review” columns are quite good – the “2011 Year in Review” is no exception…

The Hidden Dangers of the “Living Wage”

www.hoover.org

Besides being a Constitutional scholar, NYU law professor Richard Epstein is also a very capable labor economist…

Rent Control Hits the Supreme Court

professional.wsj.com

NYU law professor Richard Epstein, who is renowned for his scholarship on the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution, discusses an upcoming Supreme Court case which presents “…a serious constitutional challenge to rent-control and stabilization laws” in New York City…

Why Public Pensions Are So Rich

professional.wsj.com

“Andrew Biggs and Jason Richwine write in The Wall Street Journal that shifting government workers to 401(k)-style plans would offer greater transparency and keep benefits in line with the private economy.”

Why Placebos Work Wonders

professional.wsj.com

“From Weight Loss to Fertility, New Legitimacy for ‘Fake’ Treatments”

Teen Tells Story on Youtube Before Death

online.wsj.com

“Watch a video that 18-year-old Ben Breedlove from Austin, Texas posted on YouTube explaining his near-death experiences due to a serious heart condition, only a few days before he passed away on Christmas night.”

Does Airport Security Really Make Us Safer?

www.vanityfair.com

“Heaps of federal money, endless bureaucracy, and constant travel delays are the most visible by-products of the Transportation Security Administration. Too bad “increased safety” doesn’t fit on that list.”

M.I.T. Game-Changer: Free Online Education For All

www.forbes.com

“For Wall Street Occupiers or other decriers of the “social injustice” of college tuition, here’s a curveball bound to scramble your worldview: a totally free college education regardless of your academic performance or background.”

How To Get Smart in 2012

blogs.the-american-interest.com

I resolve to follow (at least some of) Walter Russell Mead’s advice given here…

Argentina in December 2001 versus Europe in December 2011

www.advancingafreesociety.org

“This month marks the ten-year anniversary of Argentina’s massive sovereign debt default, an event with many lessons for the European sovereign debt crisis of today, though analogies are far from perfect.”

Farnam Street The Challenge Of Causation

www.farnamstreetblog.com

“An insightful piece by Jonah Lehrer on the challenge of causation. Despite all of our fancy tools and computers, we’re still trying to figure out how X relates to Y.”

Philadelphia: The Cheesiest Are Robbing the Neediest

blogs.the-american-interest.com

“Marian Tasco is a Philadelphia city councilor who voted for DROP, an outrageous pension giveaway that allows the shameless and depraved to retire for one day, collect a six figure retirement payout, and return to work the next morning.”

Deepening Crisis Over Euro Pits Leader Against Leader

professional.wsj.com

Fascinating telling of the sequence of events which led to the European sovereign debt crisis. Quoting from this article, “Europe’s leaders were reluctantly realizing that living with a common currency meant surrendering more of their national independence than they had bargained for.”

Assorted Links (12/30/2011)

Here’s a list of articles that I have been reading lately:

The Perils of Drunk Walking

www.freakonomics.com

Friends don’t let friends drive OR walk drunk. Quoting from this article, “…every mile walked drunk… turns out to be eight times more dangerous than the mile driven drunk. To put it simply, if you need to walk a mile from a party to your home, you’re eight times more likely to die doing that than if you jump behind the wheel and drive your car that same mile.”

Chavez Falls Off The Edge of the World

blogs.the-american-interest.com

“Hugo Chavez has a new theory: that the US has developed a secret technology and is using it to give cancer to left wing Latin American rulers that we don’t like… Bringing the logical acuity and sure grasp of the laws of probability and of cause and effect that he brings to all his policy making, Chavez… has shared his reasoning with the world…”

Are we alone in the universe?

www.washingtonpost.com

“The Fermi Paradox: Is intelligence fatal?”

10 Things Our Kids Will Never Worry About Thanks to the Information Revolution

www.forbes.com

“You know you’re getting old when you start using the same sort of “kids these days” rants with your children that your parents threw your way long ago…”

Vaclav Havel 1936-2011: Living in truth

www.economist.com

“HAD communists not seized power in his homeland in 1948, Vaclav Havel would have been simply a distinguished Central European intellectual.”

Repo Men

www.nationalreview.com

Very interesting essay on the “poisonous” combination of Wall Street and Washington (hat tip to Cato’s Dan Mitchell for pointing this article out @ http://bit.ly/uBCWX2)…

What ‘Fact Checkers’ Call Lies, I Call Politics

bloomberg.com

“Last year, PolitiFact, a widely cited “fact-checking” project of the Tampa Bay Times, awarded its “Lie of the Year” to Republicans who said that the health-care law President Barack Obama had signed amounted to a “government takeover” of the field. This year, the uncoveted prize has gone to Democrats who said that Republicans had voted to “end Medicare” by voting for Representative Paul Ryan’s budget… PolitiFact often seems unaware that the same facts can be interpreted in different ways, with neither interpretation qualifying as a lie. Here is a different interpretation of its evenhandedness: PolitiFact was wrong last year and this year — in each case injecting a little poison into the political system in the name of cleaning it up.”

Saving the New Year

www.theatlantic.com

The Atlantic’s Megan McArdle explains why we all need to save much more – “…15% of each paycheck into the 401(k) is the bare minimum” – as part of shift away from an unsustainable social model based upon facilitating and promoting consumer debt toward a sustainable social model based upon prudent patterns of spending and consumption…

Where to Save?

www.theatlantic.com

Here’s Megan McArdle’s sequel to her “Saving the New Year” essay in which she provides very sound advice about how to implement one’s savings plan…

The Fed’s Mission Impossible

professional.wsj.com

University of Chicago finance professor John Cochrane provides some excellent insights about “too big to fail” and the unintended consequences of the Dodd-Frank financial reform law in this WSJ op-ed.

Margaret Thatcher on the economics and social consequences of income inequality

Here’s a remarkable video of former UK Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s last House of Commons speech (recorded 11/22/1990) on the economics and social consequences of income inequality; she also opines presciently about various dysfunctional aspects of the yet-to-be-formed economic and monetary union of various EU member states (i.e., the so-called eurozone; cf. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eurozone) and the European Central Bank (cf. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Central_Bank). Hat tip to Dan Mitchell (cf. http://bit.ly/uukWhc)…

 

Assorted links (12/28/2011)

Here’s a list of articles that I have been reading lately:

David Keyes: Merry Christmas From Saudi Arabia

professional.wsj.com

“David Keyes writes of the holiday card sent out by Saudi ambassador to the U.S. Adel al-Jubeir—Christmas greetings from a regime that prohibits Christians from worshipping publicly or wearing crosses… Had Jesus been born in Saudi Arabia today, he’d likely be imprisoned, flogged or beheaded.”

Gerald O’Driscoll: The Federal Reserve’s Covert Bailout of Europe

professional.wsj.com

“When is a loan between central banks not a loan? When it is a dollars-for-euros currency swap… This Byzantine financial arrangement could hardly be better designed to confuse observers…the Fed is, working through the ECB, bailing out European banks and, indirectly, spendthrift European governments.”

Holman Jenkins: The Fannie and Freddie Hate Storm

professional.wsj.com

“[T]he SEC’s legal complaint against former executives of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac is dubious but helps set the record straight… The financial crisis isn’t over, and around the world the problem is not housing but governments whose commitments far exceed their resources.”

Freakonomics » Is There a Rooftop Solar Bubble? And Is It About to Burst?

www.freakonomics.com

Sound familiar? “Government efforts to boost affordability and expectations of unsustainably high investment returns generated a boom market that’s destined to crash.”

The Just Distribution of Income and Wealth

thinkmarkets.wordpress.com

“There has been a lot of talk this year, and especially during the holiday season, about the inequities in the distribution of wealth and income. But most of what has been written is quite simple-minded, if the writers mean to convey something more than their own personal preferences for a different distribution.”

Midlife Crisis Economics

www.nytimes.com

“The Obama administration used to like to compare today’s problems to those that led to the Great Depression. But they differ in many ways.”

McGurn: Taxing Kim Kardashian

professional.wsj.com

“[Progressives] will not be swayed because they are not being driven by their economics. They are being driven by their conception of immorality: the idea that millionaires have more than they should—and that any wealth they have is not something they have earned but something the state has allowed them to keep. It says much about the progressive Puritanism of our age that what these folks really find most sleazy about Ms. Kardashian is not her sex tape or her marriage, but that she’s unembarrassed about making money.”

Macro Santa And The Austerity Grinch

www.forbes.com

“Lock up Santa: The stimulus gifts under the tree come at a heavy price to our children.”

Andrew Lo reviews 21 books on the financial crisis

marginalrevolution.com

This article referenced in this marginalrevolution.com will appear in the Journal of Economic Literature (cf. http://www.aeaweb.org/journal). Quoting from the article abstract, “No single narrative emerges from this broad and often contradictory collection of interpretations, but the sheer variety of conclusions is informative, and underscores the desperate need for the economics profession to establish a single set of facts from which more accurate inferences and narratives can be constructed.”

Guest post: Eight thoughts on higher education in 2012

www.washingtonpost.com

“Today’s guest bloggers offer four causes for concern and four reasons for hope.”

Design Your Own Profession

blogs.hbr.org

Way back in 1997, futurist Paul Saffo introduced a concept called “disinter-remediation” (cf. http://www.saffo.com/aboutps/interviews/infoworld.php) which describes the dynamic process discussed in this article. Not only are existing intermediaries replaced by new ones; the overall level of intermediation in society goes up. Basically, by making it cheaper to be a middleman, the Internet causes more intermediation, not less to occur…

Assorted Links (12/22/2011)

Here’s a list of articles that I have been reading lately:

The Ron Paul Portfolio

blogs.wsj.com

“Ron Paul’s investment strategy isn’t merely different. It’s shockingly different …(Investment manager) Mr. Bernstein says he has never seen such an extreme bet on economic catastrophe. “This portfolio is a half-step away from a cellar-full of canned goods and nine-millimeter rounds,” he says.”

Artist Resale Royalties: Do They Help or Hurt?

www.freakonomics.com

“Not only does it not help them, it probably hurts them.”

In Private Enterprise We Trust

www.hoover.org

NYU law professor Richard Epstein provides a free market critique of Al Gore’s and David Blood’s “A Manifesto for Sustainable Capitalism” (cf. http://on.wsj.com/sUVQRU)…

Opinion: Football Team Wins, Grades Plummet

online.wsj.com

“Glen Waddell on a new study that examines the correlation between college students’ grades and their football team’s wins.”  Here’s the paper citation: “Are Big-Time Sports a Threat to Student Achievement?” (by Jason Lindo, Isaac Swensen, and Glen Waddell), NBER Working Paper 17677. PDF available @ http://pages.uoregon.edu/waddell/papers/w17677.pdf. Here’s the paper abstract: “We consider the relationship between collegiate-football success and non-athlete student performance. We find that the team’s success significantly reduces male grades relative to female grades. This phenomenon is only present in fall quarters, which coincides with the football season. Using survey data, we find that males are more likely than females to increase alcohol consumption, decrease studying, and increase partying in response to the success of the team. Yet, females also report that their behavior is affected by athletic success, suggesting that their performance is likely impaired but that this effect is masked by the practice of grade curving.”

What Fannie and Freddie Knew

professional.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal argues that the SEC shows how the toxic twins turbocharged the housing bubble.”

The Republicans’ Holiday Gift To President Obama

www.forbes.com

“The link (direct relationship) between longer benefits and a higher unemployment rate has long been well known to economists thanks to international experience and economic research.”

Where the Christians Are

online.wsj.com

“Conrad Hackett on the size and distribution of the world’s Christian population.” According to the study cited in this video, the total number of Christians worldwide is 2 billion. Total global population is estimated at roughly 7 billion people (cf.

The Payroll Tax-Cut Consensus: Another Keynesian Sand Castle

www.forbes.com

“It is disheartening that so few conservative economists and politicians explain in a logical and direct way why Keynesian economics has failed over the past few years.”

The Financial Crisis on Trial

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Peter Wallison writes that the SEC has fingered Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, not Wall Street greed.”

Want Growth? Try Stable Tax Policy

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, John Taylor writes that the payroll tax cut is one of 84 tax provisions expiring this year, 10 times as many as expired in 1999.”

Occupy AARP! or, Our Mothers and Fathers Are Beyond Our Command!

reason.com

This is completely unsustainable; the longer we kick the entitlement reform can down the road, the worse things get: “In 1970, spending on Social Security and Medicare was one-fifth percent of the budget (blue portion). This portion has since grown to nearly 37 percent of the budget in 2010. By 2030, half of the entire budget will be consumed by payments for senior citizens.”

Assorted Links (12/20/2011)

Here’s a list of articles that I have been reading lately:

How Economics Saved Christmas

www.forbes.com

“This take on a Christmas classic was inspired in part by a sermon…and Murray Rothbard’s essay ‘Law, Property Rights, and Air Pollution.’”

Ruining Christmas: An Economist’s Guide

www.forbes.com

I think the primary takeaway of this article is that it’s important to think carefully about the relationship between good intentions and unintended consequences.  Indeed, as the author notes (see point #5), “Intending to help people isn’t the same as actually helping people… It’s a lifestyle decision that requires getting meaningfully involved in the lives of others.”

The World’s Most Repressive State

online.wsj.com

Under the so-called “Dear Leader”, crimes against the state included things like listening to a foreign radio broadcast, reading a Bible, or disrespecting a portrait of Kim Jong Il…

The Great Successor

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, John Bolton writes that in the wake of Kim Jong Il’s death and attempted anointment of his son Kim Jong Eun as his successor, there’s no guarantee that the North Korean military will accept another hereditary ruler.”

Tyranny and Indifference

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Global View columnist Bret Stephens writes that the West should heed Václav Havel’s prescription to ‘live in truth.’”

This Is Your Brain On Crony-Capitalism

www.pretenseofknowledge.com

“And despite the similar name, it’s nothing like actual capitalism.”

Zenith Men’s Defy Xtreme Tourbillon Titanium Chronograph Watch

www.amazon.com

I think this may very well be the most expensive item offered on Amazon – it’s list price is $145,000, and it is being offered on Amazon for “only” $86,999.99… 

The wages of appeasement

www.washingtonpost.com

“Obama’s policies toward Russia and Iran failed.”

Photos of the Year 2011

graphicsweb.wsj.com

“WSJ editors pick the best photos of the year organized by category, date and location. These photos represent the key moments and defining images of the news in 2011.”

Why Mandated Health Insurance Is Unfair

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, John C. Goodman writes that there’s an easier way to solve the ‘free-rider’ problem.” This article explains why “There is nothing that can be achieved with a mandate that can’t be better achieved by a carefully designed system of tax subsidies.”

MIT Will Offer Certificates to Outside Students Who Take Its Online Courses

chronicle.com

“Millions of learners have enjoyed the free lecture videos and other course materials published online through the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s OpenCourseWare project. Now MIT plans to release a fresh batch of open online courses—and, for the first time, to offer certificates to outside students…”

Capitalism and the Right to Rise

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush writes that in freedom lies the risk of failure—but in statism lies the certainty of stagnation.”

Assorted Links (12/19/2011)

Here’s a list of articles that I have been reading lately:

The ‘God Particle’ and the Origins of the Universe

online.wsj.com

“Writing in The Wall Street Journal about the Higgs boson, Michio Kaku says that the search for a unifying theory is nowhere near over.”

Twelve Months of Reading

Crowdsourcing reading lists… “We asked 50 of our friends to tell us what they enjoyed reading in 2011—from Mike Allen’s taste for Tebow-ing to Adam Zagajewski’s love of Scottish poetry.”

Fir Real? Christmas Trees in Crisis

online.wsj.com

“The Christmas tree business faces tough times as more Americans buy fakes or opt for smaller, cheaper trees. To fight back, tree growers are using science to develop more enticing trees.”

Daron Acemoglu on Inequality

www.freakonomics.com

“If you’re even a little bit interested in income inequality and how it matters, this Browser interview with MIT economist Daron Acemoglu is a must-read. Acemoglu explains how economists generally think about inequality…”

What Obama Left Behind in Iraq

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Fouad Ajami writes that there’s no need to fear the deference of Iraq’s Shiites toward Iran.”

And the Crisis Winner Is? Government

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, David Malpass writes that from Greece to Washington, D.C., to New York state, there’s no effective mechanism to control government spending.”

The Euro Zone’s Double Failure

Online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Martin Feldstein writes that Europe needs country-by-country fiscal reforms, not a renewed push for political integration.”

The Sparring Partner

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal’s Wonder Land column, Daniel Henninger writes that Mitt Romney needs a sparring partner to make him fit to compete with heavyweight champ Barack Obama—and that’s Newt Gingrich.”

Calling Obama’s Payroll Tax Bluff

professional.wsj.com

“The sparring between Republicans and Democrats over how to pay for an extension of the payroll-tax break is one more sign of how rotten the tax code is and why the entire thing needs to be thrown out and replaced with a system that fosters economic growth instead of endless redistribution of income.”

Happy (Awkward) Holidays

“How come the holidays can bring out the grumps in us? We look at some common sticky situations and offer tips on how to handle them with grace and poise.”

Bain Over Newt Any Day

www.theblaze.com

“This week, Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney called on newly minted front-runner and noted historian Newt Gingrich to return the estimated $1.6 million he made providing “strategic advice” to Freddie Mac, the quasi-governmental agency that has done the hard work of making “toxic home mortgages” a forever feature of our national portfolio.”

To Ask or Not to Ask: Experiments in Charitable Giving

www.freakonomics.com

“Our recent podcast “What Makes a Donor Donate?” features economist John List, who has concentrated his research on the science of philanthropy. In short, when it comes to convincing people to give, some ways are better than others. But what about just directly asking them?”

Gridlock to the Rescue

townhall.com

“Washington gridlock may turn out to be the salvation of the Obama administration.”

Rare 1787 Gold Coin Sells for $7.4 Million

“A rare 1787 gold Brasher doubloon has been sold for $7.4 million, one of the highest prices ever paid for a gold coin… The Brasher doubloon is considered the first American-made gold coin denominated in dollars; the U.S. Mint in Philadelphia didn’t begin striking coins until the 1790s.”

God’s Quarterback

online.wsj.com

“He has led the Denver Broncos to one improbable victory after another, defying his critics and revealing the deep-seated anxieties in American society about the intertwining of religion and sports.”

The Free Market versus Crony “Capitalism”

thinkmarkets.wordpress.com

“…perhaps the government must break up the large financial institutions so that they can fail without dragging us all … down with them.”

Financial Regulation: Worse Than a Crime

More on how financial regulation (particularly, Basel risk based capital standards) had the unintended consequence of focusing and exacerbating financial risk, rather than dispersing and mitigating it

America’s New Energy Security

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Daniel Yergin writes that thanks to new technology, the U.S. has become less dependent on petroleum imports from unstable countries.”

Global Warming and Adaptability

“In The Wall Street Journal, Bjørn Lomborg writes that any carbon deal to replace Kyoto would have a negligible impact on climate in coming decades…we need to focus first on how we can build more resilient, adaptable communities.”

Employers Say College Graduates Lack Job Skills

chronicle.com

“Many employers believe colleges aren’t adequately preparing students for jobs, according to findings of a study presented here on Monday by the Accrediting Council for Independent Colleges and Schools.”