Category Archives: Assorted Links

Assorted Links (1/26/2011)

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

My State of the Union Address

townhall.com

“President Obama fulfilled his constitutional duty and gave his report on the state of the union last night. Here’s mine: We’re in deep trouble.”

If We Win the Future, Who Loses?

blogs.forbes.com

“Or does that question even make sense? The State of the Union Address was predicated on the notion that The Future is something that can be won or lost, and if we as Americans are not diligent about doing what it takes to Win, someone else will. ”Winning the future” is an idea that doesn’t really make sense.”

Fazzari on Keynesian stimulus

cafehayek.com

“The latest EconTalk is a conversation with Steve Fazzari on the economics of government spending to improve the economy. We talk about the intuition of the Keynesian argument on behalf of government spending and whether it’s possible to evaluate whether it made things better or worse.”

Uncertainty Continues To Depress Jobs

investors.com

“President Obama, in his State of the Union address, promised to focus on job-creation this year. But robust new hiring is unlikely when so much uncertainty — created by the same White House now promising jobs — hangs over the economy.”

Another Day Older and Deeper in Debt… — The American, A Magazine of Ideas

american.com

“If lawmakers are going to vote in favor of raising the debt ceiling, they should do it only in exchange for a change in the country’s direction.”

Too Moderately Moderate

hoover.org

“The main flaw that has dogged Obama’s progressive thinking from the outset is that on domestic issues, he believes that the appropriate path toward prosperity is a combination of new regulation with larger government spending.  Slimming down government through deregulation is a distant third on his agenda.”

Risk, Uncertainty, and Rule of Law

www.thepublicdiscourse.com

This article provides an excellent explanation of risk versus uncertainty (relying upon Frank Knight’s seminal book (published on 1921) on this topic), and explains well the Austrian economics concept of “regime uncertainty” (see also http://bit.ly/h5OEQo).

Postal Service Eyes Closing Thousands of Post Offices

online.wsj.com

“The postal service is reviewing more than half of the nation’s post offices, which are operating at a deficit, and lobbying Congress to allow it to change a law so it can close the most unprofitable.”

Paul Samuelson’s Secret

www.economicprincipals.com

David Warsh provides a fascinating narrative concerning the late MIT economist and Nobel Laureate Paul Samuelson’s involvement in one of the earliest and most influential hedge funds ever, Commodities Corp.  Along the way, Mr. Warsh also manages to provide a rich conceptual framework and intellectual history for understanding how important developments in finance theory which were largely pioneered by the likes of Professors Samuelson and Fama (e.g., the notion that financial markets are informationally efficient which in turn implies that stock prices follow a random walk) have influenced the evolution over time of financial markets and institutions.  Mr. Warsh also liberally references a recently published book by Sebastian Mallaby entitled “More Money Than God: Hedge Funds and the Making of a New Elite”, which he refers to as a “…very interesting book about the origins and recent history of the hedge fund industry”.  I think I’ll buy a copy!

Journal of Universal Rejection

pacific.edu

“The founding principle of the Journal of Universal Rejection (JofUR) is rejection. Universal rejection. That is to say, all submissions, regardless of quality, will be rejected.”

Number of the Week: Americans Dipping Into Savings

blogs.wsj.com

“Over the two years ending September 2010, Americans withdrew a net $311 billion — or about 1.4% of their disposable income — from their savings and investment accounts.”

Review & Outlook: Amber Waves of Ethanol

online.wsj.com

“Four of every 10 rows of U.S. corn now go for fuel, not food.”

Generation ‘Y Me?

online.wsj.com

“Michael Casey Jr. writes in The Wall Street Journal that demographic changes here and abroad mean young Americans face a bleaker investment future than their parents did.”

The Weekend Interview with Walter Williams: The State Against Blacks

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Jason Riley interviews economist Walter Williams, who says that ‘The welfare state has done to black Americans what slavery couldn’t do. . . . And that is to destroy the black family.’”

George F. Will – Hubris heading for a fall

washingtonpost.com

“This is the vicious cycle of government that should worry Larry Summers.”

Assorted Links (1/21/2011)

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

Does health care reform reduce the deficit? No, but its tax increases do.

washingtonexaminer.com

“I have a plan to reduce the budget deficit. The essence of the plan is the federal government writing me a check for $1 billion. The plan will be financed by $3 billion of tax increases. According to my back-of-the envelope calculations, giving me that $1 billion will reduce the budget deficit by $2 billion.”

The Neuroscience Of Music

wired.com

“Why does music make us feel? On the one hand, music is a purely abstract art form, devoid of language or explicit ideas. The stories it tells are all subtlety and subtext. And yet, even though music says little, it still manages to touch us deep, to tickle some universal nerves.”

Fans of Fibonacci

cafehayek.com

“If you, like me, enjoy the Fibonacci numbers, you will enjoy this. And if you don’t know what they are, you’ll enjoy it anyway.”

Do We Need a Department of Homeland Security or a TSA?

forbes.com

“The new Republican House of Representatives took office amidst much fanfare about the US Constitution and respecting Constitutional limits on government. I have suggested that if they are really serious about it, they will start by abolishing the Transportation Security Administration.”

John Taylor: The Republicans’ Shadow Fed Chairman – BusinessWeek

businessweek.com

“The Stanford University economist’s blistering policy critiques have inspired GOP leaders.”

Backdoor Big Government

city-journal.org

“Americans sent a small-government message in November, but Obama isn’t listening.”

A Most Valuable Democrat

nytimes.com

“Joe Lieberman has often put himself between a rock and a hard place. But at the end of the day, he’s been an indispensable senator.”

Charles Krauthammer – Everything starts with repeal

washingtonpost.com

“The whole Obamacare bill was gamed; repeal is crucial.”

Paul Rubin: Obama’s Deregulation Initiative Won’t Work

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Emory University economist Paul Rubin says that the permanent staffs at executive branch agencies relentlessly push for more, not fewer rules and controls.”

Review & Outlook: The Ruling Ad-Hocracy

online.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal on the collapse of Dodd-Frank’s promise of no more bailouts.”

Harsanyi: Obama isn’t fooling anyone – The Denver Post

denverpost.com

“President Barack Obama penned a witty Wall Street Journal op-ed this week titled “Toward a 21st Century Regulatory System.””

Amy Chua Is a Wimp

nytimes.com

“”Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother” may denounce soft American-style parenting, but its author shelters her children from the truly arduous experiences necessary to achieve.”

Review & Outlook: Obama’s Rules Revelation

online.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal asks if the era of big regulation is really over.”

Review & Outlook: The Anti-Illinois

online.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal writes that Georgia debates a tax reform with lower rates.”

Herbert Pardes: The Coming Doctor Shortage

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Dr. Herbert Pardes of New York-Presbyterian Hospital writes that we can’t insure 32 million more people and cut funding to train doctors by $60 billion.”

Dick Armey and Matt Kibbe: What Congress Should Cut

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Dick Armey and Matt Kibbe of FreedomWorks identify $3 trillion in federal spending cuts over the next decade.”

Review & Outlook: The Repeal Vote

online.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal on an historic repudiation of an entitlement that is only 10 months old.”

Midday rail service may attract more riders, but at what cost?

www.statesman.com

“On Tuesday, Capital Metro will inaugurate all-day, weekday MetroRail service. The question is, will it be a success? And the answer will be, almost certainly, that we won’t know.”

The numbers cited in this Austin American Statesman article imply a “fare recovery ratio”, or FRR of 2.9% for light rail. FRR measures the % of the transit system’s operating costs actually paid by riders (as opposed to taxpayers). Putting Cap Metro’s 2.9% light rail FRR into perspective, the average FRR for US public transit systems is roughly 40%. Pre-light rail, Capital Metro’s FRR was 9% (see http://bit.ly/3gK7mZ).

Limiting free speech isn’t the answer

cnn.com 

“In the aftermath of the January 8 atrocity in Arizona, in which alleged shooter Jared Loughner killed six people and wounded 13, politicians and pundits have blamed inflammatory language or symbols used by certain political groups — read Sarah Palin and the Tea Party — for Loughner’s acts.”

How Many People Suffer From Mental Illness? – The Numbers Guy – WSJ

blogs.wsj.com

“Producing a reliable count vexes researchers.”

Higher Investment Best Way to Reduce Unemployment, Recent Experience Shows

www.advancingafreesociety.org

“Some economists argue that the efforts now underway to reduce government spending as a share of GDP will have adverse effects on unemployment. This is not what the data show.”

Assorted Links (1/14/2011)

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

Charles Krauthammer – Massacre, followed by libel

washingtonpost.com

“Don’t link the Tucson tragedy to a ‘climate of hate’; Loughner has a clinical disorder.”

The Market Flashes ‘Caution’ on U.S. Treasurys

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Neel Kashkari and Steve Rodosky write that the forward five-year annual inflation rate has increased 94 basis points to 2.90%, which is now above policy makers’ unofficial target of 2%.”

Obama Rises to the Challenge

online.wsj.com

“He sounded like the president, not a denizen of the faculty lounge, writes Peggy Noonan.”

Wisconsin 1, Illinois 0

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Potomac Watch columnist Kimberley A. Strassel writes that with Springfield raising taxes amidst its fiscal disaster, the new Republican governor of the Badger State is telling Illinoisans, Escape to Wisconsin.”

The Jared Loughner Problem

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Business World columnist Holman W. Jenkins, Jr. says that remedies exist short of locking up troubled people based on their personalities.”

A Price for Raising the Debt Ceiling

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Arthur B. Laffer writes that Republicans should attach provisions repealing the worst aspects of ObamaCare and financial reform to spending that the president absolutely needs.”

Why the Left Lost It

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Wonder Land columnist Daniel Henninger writes that the accusation that the tea parties were linked to the Tucson murders is the product of calculation and genuine belief.”

Illinois’s Tax Increase Has Business Fuming, Neighbors Courting

online.wsj.com

Sadly, the land of Lincoln (my home state) has become the US equivalent of Greece in terms of its current fiscal situation! “As Illinois raised its corporate-tax rate to 7% from 4.8%, governors of some nearby states said they would woo the state’s businesses.”

S&P, Moody’s Warn On U.S. Credit Rating

online.wsj.com

Apparently money doesn’t grown on trees after all!  “Two leading credit rating agencies cautioned the U.S. on its credit rating, expressing concern over a deteriorating fiscal situation that they say needs correction.”

The U.S. Loses Ground on Economic Freedom

online.wsj.com

“The world is resuming its trend toward more freedom, but those who fear the U.S. is falling behind the dynamic economies of Asia have cause for concern, Terry Miller writes in The Wall Street Journal.”

The Jared Loughner Problem

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Business World columnist Holman W. Jenkins, Jr. says that remedies exist short of locking up troubled people based on their personalities.”

A Predictable Tragedy in Arizona

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Dr. E. Fuller Torrey writes that starting in the 1960s, we emptied state mental hospitals without providing adequate treatment alternatives.”

George F. Will – The charlatans’ response to the Tucson tragedy

washingtonpost.com

“Half-baked sociology ties conservatism to violence.”

Obamacare Deficit Debate is a Red Herring

blogs.forbes.com

“The law is only deficit neutral because of the inclusion of the Community Living Assistance Services and Supports program.”

Jockeying for Position: Strategic High School Choice Under Texas’ Top Ten Percent Plan

papers.nber.org

Unintended Consequences: This new NBER paper documents that high school students have responded, gaming the system by choosing high schools with lower performing peers as a way to get into the top 10%. The authors note, “The net effect of strategic behavior is to slightly decrease minority students’ representation in the pool.”

Junk Science Isn’t a Victimless Crime

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Dr. Paul A. Offit of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia writes that vaccines don’t cause autism—and there was never any proof that they do. Too bad kids had to die while we figured that out.”

In Budget Crises, an Opening for School Reform

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Michelle Rhee, former chancellor of the Washington, D.C., school system and the founder of StudentsFirst, writes that school systems can put students first by making sure any layoffs account for teacher quality, not seniority.”

The Politicized Mind

nytimes.com

“The political opportunism occasioned by the Tucson massacre has ranged from the irrelevant to the irresponsible, all while we ignore the most productive questions.”

If You Can’t Stand the Heat . . .

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, John Steele Gordon offers a short history of heated political rhetoric in the U.S. He writes that Harry Truman would have had little patience for the notion that caustic political rhetoric causes murder—an argument pundits are currently making about the murders in Tucson.”

Traditional Bookstores are Doomed

advancingafreesociety.org

“The traditional bookstore is doomed by e-readers and online sales of hard copy books.”

Economic Principals

economicprincipals.com

“Perhaps this year the event acquired a name that at last will stick. The World Financial Crisis? The Great Recession? Why not call it The Long Slump, said Robert Hall, of Stanford University, in his presidential address at the meeting here of the American Economic Association… This slump, which began in the autumn of 2007, is expected to last most of a decade… before the unemployment rate returns to its post-World War II trend.”

Is Groupon Good for Retailers? — HBS Working Knowledge

hbs.edu

“For retailers offering deals through the wildly popular online start-up Groupon, does the one-day publicity compensate for the deep hit to profit margins? A new working paper, To Groupon or Not to Groupon, sets out to help small businesses decide.”

The Hateful Left

city-journal.org

“Where incendiary political rhetoric truly resides in America.”

United in Horror

nytimes.com

“Violence in American politics tends to bubble up from a world that’s far stranger than any Glenn Beck monologue.”

AAMC Releases New Physician Shortage Estimates Post-Reform

aamc.org

“The AAMC Center for Workforce Studies has released new physician shortage estimates that, beginning in 2015, are 50 percent worse than originally anticipated prior to health care reform.”

Capitalism’s comeback

opinion.financialpost.com

“It’s up to free markets and the private sector to bail us out of the mess The spirit of capitalism, supposedly killed off in the wake of the financial crisis, is sweeping the world’s economies. From Obama’s new White House to the Las Vegas computer show to the international auto industry and beyond, business is making a comeback and the essence of free markets — competition — is ripping through the global economic system.”

Assorted Links (1/8/2011)

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

Will Repeal of Obamacare Increase the Deficit?

jeffreymiron.com

“Rescinding the federal law to overhaul the health-care system, the first objective of House Republicans who ascended to power this week, would ratchet up the federal deficit by about $230 billion over the next decade … , according to congressional budget analysts.”

The Dismal State of Long-Term State and Local Government Finance

www.becker-posner-blog.com

“The disturbingly large present and prospective fiscal deficits of the federal government receive much attention, and deservedly so. Yet the financial situations of many state and local government finances are also in bad shape, and in many respects they are far more difficult to solve than are the federal fiscal problems.”

Underwater Homes Estimate of One in Four Springs Leaks

blogs.wsj.com

“Roughly one in four homeowners with a mortgage owe more than their home is worth, according to widely repeated estimates, but the real housing picture may not be so dismal.”

The Great Lone Star Migration

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Michael Barone finds that more and more Americans are moving to low-tax, business-friendly states.”

The Taxman Cometh to Illinois—With a 75% Hike

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Stephen Moore writes that Democrats in the Illinois legislature have convened an emergency session to raise income taxes before Republicans take control.”

Government Electric and its secret bailout

washingtonexaminer.com

“No company is more cozy with government, in my opinion, than General Electric. GE spends more on lobbying than any other corporation. So many of its businesses thrive on — or even depend on — Big Government: defense systems, embryonic stem-cells, smart meters, greenhouse gas offsets, wind mills, electric car components, high-tech batteries, health-care products, and more.”

Congress’s Broken Windows

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Wonder Land columnist Dan Henninger writes that the president must have power over the budget to make spending reform work.”

Charles Krauthammer – Constitutionalism

washingtonpost.com

“Its wide appeal and depth make it a promising first step to a conservative future.”

Yule Blog 2010-2011: The Light at the End of the Yule Blog

blogs.the-american-interest.com

“As a kid I always had some trouble understanding the business about the three wise men. Gold always comes in handy so I could see why you would bring gold to a baby — but what on earth were frankincense and myrrh and why would anybody give them to a child? I figured myrrh might have something to do with myrtle, like the crepe myrtles that bloom so beautifully in South Carolina. So maybe the myrrh was flowers for the mom?”

Buckle Up for Round 2

nytimes.com

“The health care crackup is coming, no matter how much people wish the issue would just go away.”

retirement planning – MSN Money

moneycentral.msn.com

“The bear market led throngs of investors to flee stocks for the relative ‘safety’ of bonds. But with the economy changing, those investments now threaten our retirement savings.”

Michigan and Rich Rodriguez: Inside the Tragicomedy

online.wsj.com

“If the tenure of Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez, who was fired Wednesday, looked chaotic to outsiders, it appeared positively crazy from the inside. Writer John U. Bacon offers his thoughts.”

Hey, Folks: Here’s a Digital Requiem for a Dearly Departed Salutation

online.wsj.com

“Across the Internet the use of dear is going the way of sealing wax. Email has come to be viewed as informal even when used as formal communication, leaving some etiquette experts appalled at the ways professional strangers address one another.”

Harsanyi: The Constitution is dead. Long live the Constitution

denverpost.com

Hat tip to Russ Roberts… “Every patriotic fiber of my body tells me that reading the Constitution aloud at the commencement of congressional sessions is a good idea. Heck, a pop quiz might even be in order.”

Yule Blog 2010-11: Dwelling in Darkness, Seeing A Light | Via Meadia

blogs.the-american-interest.com

“As the Christmas season draws to a close and the return of regular blogging looms, I’m looking back over my short life as a writer on religious matters and thinking about how writing on religion is and is not like writing on other controversial topics.”

The SEC vs. Zuckerberg

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Business World columnist Holman W. Jenkins, Jr. writes about Facebook’s likely IPO.”

The States Versus ObamaCare

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Florida’s Attorney General Pam Bondi writes that as new state attorneys general take office in the coming days, we should expect to see an increase in the number of states challenging the health-care law in court.”

Obamacare And Price Controls

blogs.forbes.com

“If they survive judicial and legislative challenges, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act’s big ticket health insurance reforms – the individual mandate, Medicaid expansion, creation of health insurance exchanges, and prohibition of preexisting condition exclusions and basing premiums on health status – will take effect in 2014.”

Charles Limb: Your brain on improv | Video on TED.com

www.ted.com

“TED Talks Musician and researcher Charles Limb wondered how the brain works during musical improvisation — so he put jazz musicians and rappers in an fMRI to find out. What he and his team found has deep implications for our understanding of creativity of all kinds.”

Assessing the Housing Sector

economix.blogs.nytimes.com

“An examination of various housing and home construction data suggests prices will be little unchanged in 2011, an economist writes.”

What does one TRILLION dollars look like?

pagetutor.com

Hat tip to Harvard’s Greg Mankiw for pointing this website out, which illustrates (using Google Sketchup software) what $10,000, $1,000,000, $100,000,000, $1,000,000,000, and $1,000,000,000,000 looks like if you stacked up a bunch of $100 bills (which is the largest denomination US currency in circulation)…

Assorted Links (1/4/2011)

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

Visitors snap up 100 trillion Zimbabwe bank notes – Yahoo! Finance

finance.yahoo.com

“Western visitors to Zimbabwe are looking for zeros. They’re snapping up old, defunct Zimbabwe bank notes…”

The Benefits Storm

city-journal.org

“Why New York can’t afford enough sanitation workers to clean up the snow.”

The Tale of How Insulin Came to Market

advancingafreesociety.org

“One of the most pressing questions of modern biomedical research asks what the relationship between government regulation and scientific innovation is. Nothing is more common today than the plea that extensive government regulation, at every stage of the development process, is needed to protect innocent and uninformed patients and their families from exploitation by pharmaceutical companies, hospitals, and physicians.”

A Very Good Year for Economics ideos, Especially Cartoons

advancingafreesociety.org

“Short video clips are a good way to get students interested in economics and help them understand the basics. I especially like the Golden Balls video for teaching game theory and Milton Friedman’s classic telling of the pencil story for teaching price theory…”

Yule Blog 2010-11: The Mother of Meaning

blogs.the-american-interest.com

“Connections between the adult Jesus and the baby in the manger aren’t easy to make. At first glance, the gospels don’t help much; whatever the gospel writers had in mind, producing complete biographies of Jesus wasn’t it. Mark omits Christmas altogether, and starts with Jesus getting baptized and launching his career.”

Dodd-Frank and the Return of the Loan Shark

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Todd Zywicki of George Mason University writes that in the name of consumer protection, Congress has pushed more Americans outside the traditional banking system.”

Congress Rediscovers the Constitution

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Cato Institute scholar Roger Pilon says that Congress must recognize its responsibility to decide on a legislation’s constitutionality and not just defer to the courts.”

Review & Outlook: Rules for Smaller Government

online.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal argues the House GOP is making it harder to tax and spend.”

Living in the Political Wake of the Bubble

american.com

“We are repeating history and thus will repeat the mistakes of history; here are four ideas to make sure the future is better than the past.”

An Innovator in Every Apartment

city-journal.org

“Cities should unravel their pre-digital regulations.”

Yule Blog 2010-11: How Real Is The Meaning?

blogs.the-american-interest.com

“By now, the Three Kings are well on their way to Bethlehem, and the Christmas season is drawing to a close. But the Three Kings (actually, ‘wise men’ according to Matthew’s gospel) aren’t just bringing their famous three gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh. They bring with them another set of questions that we have to wrestle with a bit if we are going to see Christmas clearly.”

How Videogames Are Changing the Economy

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Andy Kessler writes that videogames—and not wars—are now driving innovation and helping companies save money.”

Review & Outlook: Canada’s Competitive Edge

online.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal describes how Canada’s lower corporate tax rate has created a warmer climate for capital and business investment than in the U.S.”

Peter J. Wallison: Moving Beyond Fannie and Freddie – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“Peter Wallison writes in The Wall Street Journal that the new Congress should never again allow government housing guarantees to put taxpayers at risk.”

Assorted Links (12/31/2010)

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

American Robot’s Job Outsourced To Overseas Robot

theonion.com

“CANTON, OH—QT2D-7, an 11-year-old electric assembly-operations robot, was laid off Monday when the Lawn-Boy plant that has employed him relocated its manufacturing headquarters to New Delhi, India.”

Yule Blog 2010: Meaning in Three Dimensions

blogs.the-american-interest.com

“Now it gets tough. That little baby wrapped in swaddling clothes and lying so cutely in the manger is the biggest trouble maker in world history, and the shocking claims that Christianity makes about who he is and what he means divide Christians not only from atheists and agnostics, but also splits Christians off from other religions.”

A New Year rolls in

boston.com

“The world has already begun to welcome 2011, as the New Year has been entered by people living on some Pacific islands, Australia and Asia.”

The Best Economics Blogs – The Source – WSJ

blogs.wsj.com

“Dow Jones Newswires columnist Alen Mattich shares his favorite blogs.”

Charles Krauthammer – Government by regulation. Shhh.

washingtonpost.com

“How to impose a liberal agenda on a center-right nation.”

RealClearMarkets – How to Reduce Unemployment to 4%

realclearmarkets.com

“In January 2001, at the start of this decade, America’s economy created 268,000 jobs, and the national unemployment rate stood at 4.2%. Five years later, after a so-called “jobless recovery,” the unemployment rate was 4.7%, with 193,000 new jobs created in January 2006. Now the rate is 9.8%, with a scant 39,000 jobs created last month.”

Yule Blog 2010: Personal Meaning

blogs.the-american-interest.com

“Yesterday I blogged about how theists and atheists are the not all that different from each other; we are almost all transcendentalists in the sense that almost all of us find some kind of moral, ethical and even spiritual meaning in life. Human life amounts to more than eating and scratching our various itches, and whether or not we believe in God, we want to do something real with our lives. We have itches that scratching won’t fix.”

Optimism for Obama Should Come With Caution

fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com

“What have we learned about President Obama’s re-election chances since the midterm elections?”

The Holiday Stimulus Package, Continued

economix.blogs.nytimes.com

“In the holiday season, too, demand remains strongly linked to supply, an economist writes.”

Yule Blog 2010: The Meaning of Christmas

blogs.the-american-interest.com

“Happy fifth day of Christmas, and welcome back to the 2010 Yule Blog, where we aim to keep the holiday fires burning right up through Twelfth Night on January 6.”

The Right Way to Balance the Budget

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Andrew G. Biggs, Kevin Hassett and Matt Jensen of the American Enterprise Institute write that their research on the experience of 21 countries over 37 years yields a simple truth: Cutting spending works, and raising taxes doesn’t.”

Review & Outlook: A Deregulating Democrat

online.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal remembers Alfred Kahn, 1917-2010.”

Popes, Atheists and Freedom

online.wsj.com

“Daniel Henninger writes in The Wall Street Journal’s Wonder Land column that secularists should recognize that the pope’s fight is their fight.”

‘Death Panels’ Come Back to Life

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, David B. Rivkin Jr and Elizabeth Price Foley write that the FDA’s recent restrictions on the drug Avastin are the beginning of a long slide toward health-care rationing.”

The Mistaken Attack on Outsourcing

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Mihir Desai of Harvard writes about his research showing that when American firms grow abroad, they also grow domestically.”

Why do firms exist?

economist.com

“FOR philosophers the great existential question is: “Why is there something rather than nothing?” For management theorists the more mundane equivalent is: “Why do firms exist? Why isn’t everything done by the market?” Today most people live in a market economy, and central planning is remembered as the greatest economic disaster of the 20th century.”

Assorted Links (12/28/2010)

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

Yule Blog 2010: The Hinge of Fate 

blogs.the-american-interest.com

“Manger is the French word meaning “to eat”; a manger is a place where you put hay and similar things for the animals in a barn to eat. The swaddling clothes were used to wrap up the limbs of newborns so they wouldn’t injure themselves by moving too much.”

The Sidney Awards, Part II

nytimes.com

“Here’s the second batch of winners of the 2010 Sidney Awards. It seems as though turbulent times produce good essays. “

Christianity and Health Care

gmscan.wordpress.com

“This week I’m writing from Waco, Texas where I just finished speaking at a symposium on “Human Dignity and the Future of Health Care.” The symposium was sponsored by Baylor University’s Institute for Faith and Learning. Here are some random snapshots.”

The High Price of Pets. But So Worth It.

online.wsj.com 

“When I was a kid, I had a Yorkshire terrier named Coco and a Siamese cat named Shan. I loved those animals and was devastated when they died. They remain leading characters in some of my fondest memories of youth.”

America’s Dangerous Rush to Shrink Its Military Power

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Mark Helprin writes that defense spending has priority. As in the 1930s, the economy is the supposedly humanitarian excuse for reducing the military—although the endless miseries of the world will not be alleviated if due to an imbalance of power great and little wars rage across it.”

ObamaCare and the General Welfare Clause

online.wsj.com 

“In The Wall Street Journal, constitutional law professors Randy E. Barnett and David G. Oedel write that the individual mandate is not the only problem with the health law. Its draconian Medicaid mandates on states exceed Congress’s spending power.”

Fed’s Free Money Lures This Important Writer: Kevin Hassett

bloomberg.com

“If AIG was too important to fail, can’t I be, too?”

In a Tale That Wags Dog Owners, They Rent Flocks for Bored Collies – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com 

“Once upon a time, Americans got dogs for their sheep. Now they get sheep for their dogs.”

Yule Blog 2010: Born of a WHAT?!

blogs.the-american-interest.com

It is not quite the most controversial verse in the Bible, but Luke 1:35 comes close. Mary has just replied to the angel Gabriel’s statement that she will be the mother of the Messiah with a question of her own: “How shall this be,” she says in the words of the King James Version, “seeing I know not a man?””

‘Random Walk’ author Malkiel bullish on international index funds

blog.oregonlive.com

“IT’S ONLY MONEY interviews the author of “A Random Walk Down Wall Street” about why the book’s new edition shifts asset allocations from bonds to international stocks.”

Is Basic Health Care a ‘Right’?

cafehayek.com

“Ronald Pies, MD, asserts that every individual has a “right” to “basic health care” – meaning, a right to receive such care without paying for it (Letters, Dec. 26).”

What I love about Scrooge.

slate.com

“Here’s what I like about Ebenezer Scrooge: His meager lodgings were dark because darkness is cheap, and barely heated because coal is not free. His dinner was gruel, which he prepared himself. Scrooge paid no man to wait on him.”

Op-Ed Columnist – The Roots Of White Anxiety

nytimes.com

“To understand the country’s polarization, take a look at the admissions process at elite private colleges.”

The new young investor: Shunning stocks

finance.yahoo.com

“When 18-year-old Robert White decided to jumpstart his retirement plan, he invested his life savings of $25,000 into an aggressive mutual fund. Little did he know that just five years later, he would make a complete 180 and join the ranks of a new group of young investors who have become so risk averse by the wild market swings that they’d rather park their money in safety zones, like CDs or Treasurys.”

Assorted Links (12/24/2010)

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

RealClearMarkets – Where Unions Are, Americans Aren’t

www.realclearmarkets.com

“The American people have been voting with their feet, the Census Bureau announced on Tuesday, leaving states with heavy union influence and choosing to live in “right-to-work” states with higher job growth where they cannot be forced to join a union as a condition of employment.”

RealClearMarkets – Elimination Of the FCC Is a Worthy Goal

www.realclearmarkets.com

“Regulatory State: Two days after the FCC voted to take over the Internet, it stands in the way of an agreement between private companies. This is an agency that should be targeted for elimination.”

The Holiday Stimulus Package

economix.blogs.nytimes.com

“The annual huge swell in retail sales each December brings with it many jobs but also demonstrates the inefficiency of spending as a tool to increase employment, an economist writes.”

Census: Fast Growth in States with No Income Tax

aei.org

“The latest census data shows that growth occurs in states where taxes are lower. Seven of the nine states that do not levy an income tax grew faster than the national average.”

The Sidney Awards

nytimes.com

“Drum roll, please. The annual awards for the best magazine essays of 2010 go to … “

Charles Krauthammer – Obama’s new start

washingtonpost.com

“Obama has leveled the playing the field for battles of the 112th Congress.”

Review & Outlook: PolitiFiction

online.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal on true ‘lies’ about ObamaCare.”

Congress’s Monstrous Legal Legacy

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Potomac Watch columnist Kimberley A. Strassel writes that ObamaCare, put together like Frankenstein, risks coming apart at the seams.”

In Hoc Anno Domini

online.wsj.com

“The late Vermont Royster’s classic 1949 Christmas editorial.”

Tea Partiers and the Spirit of Giving

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, American Enterprise Institute President Arthur C. Brooks writes that charitable gifts are a cheerful protest vote against the growing state.”

Do Christians Overemphasize Christmas?

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, John Wilson writes that some theologians claim that Easter is more important, but that’s wrong—when we celebrate one, we celebrate the other.”

The Unbroken Window » Tidings of Comfort and Joy

theunbrokenwindow.com

“Did you know that the US Postal Service attempted to monopolize the e-mail industry when it was first created? Could you imagine having to send e-mails through them, and not through gmail, yahoo, hotmail, or whatever firm you currently use?”

Atheism Kills: Gallup Poll Reveals

blogs.the-american-interest.com

“Here at Via Meadia we are preparing for the Christmas holidays, and will be firing up the traditional Yule Blog tomorrow for the 13 posts of Christmas in a hallowed holiday tradition dating all the way back to 2009.”

Very Religious Americans Lead Healthier Lives

gallup.com

“This is the third article in a special multipart series on religiosity and wellbeing in America. The first article explored the relationship between religiosity and wellbeing across the Well-Being Index and sub-indexes. The second article examined religiosity and emotional health. This piece explores specific components within the Healthy Behavior Index.”

Taxes and the Top Percentile Myth

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, the Cato Institute’s Alan Reynolds writes that a 2008 OECD study of leading economies found that ‘taxation is most progressively distributed in the United States.’ More so than Sweden or France.”

Does the Constitution Mean Anything?

spectator.org

“Obamacare unconstitutional? The denizens of Washington and their many friends who favor expansive and expensive government are worried. At least one judge has actually read the Constitution. Moreover, Tea Party activists are calling themselves constitutional conservatives and insisting that the Cons

Sebelius’s Price Controls

online.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal on the HHS rule that says states must order more health benefits but also lower rates.”

Assorted Links (12/22/2010)

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

How Government Failure Caused the Great Recession — The American, A Magazine of Idea

american.com

“The interaction of six government policies explains the timing, severity, and global impact of the financial crisis.”

Robert Bryce: A Wind Power Boonedoggle

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Robert Bryce writes that Dallas billionaire T. Boone Pickens badly misjudged the supply and price of natural gas.”

Jenkins: Next, an Aircraft Bubble?

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Business World columnist Holman Jenkins writes that overexpansion by airplane makers may lead to collapse and consolidation.”

Review & Outlook: A Nation in Motion

online.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal writes that the Census reveals a people who are moving to pro-market red states.”

Economists are creating new methods for tracking prices.

slate.com

“At some 23,000 retailers and businesses in 90 U.S. cities, hundreds of government workers find and mark down prices on very precise products. And I’m not kidding when I say “very precise.””

Christmas and Western Civilization

thepublicdiscourse.com

“The holiday season has many traditions, some ancient, some modern. Among the most recent is a paradoxical one: complaints, yearly renewed, about the public recognition of Christmas as a religious celebration. As these observances get underway (see here and here), we might do well to ask the following question: what, if anything, has Christmas contributed to Western Civilization that could earn the respect even of the secularist and hence win his acquiescence in its ongoing public acknowledgment?”

The Net Neutrality Coup

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, John Fund writes that the campaign to regulate the Internet was funded by a who’s who of left-liberal foundations.”

Means-Tested Mortgage Modification: Homes Saved or Income Destroyed?

nber.org

“This paper uses the theories of price discrimination and optimal taxation to investigate effects of underwater mortgages on foreclosures and the incentives to earn income, and the degree to which those effects are shaped by public policy. I find that the federal government’s means-tested mortgage modification plan creates a massive implicit tax that may be significant even from a macroeconomic perspective. An alternative of modifying mortgages to maximize lender collections would also feature means tests, but with less effort distortion and perhaps fewer foreclosures. The paper also considers the consequences of a public policy that left mortgage modification to lenders, subject to a requirement that modification would not be conditioned on borrower income.”

Futures Market Forecast of a Federal Funds Rate Increase Likely to be Appropriate

advancingafreesociety.org

“According to the federal funds futures market, the Fed will begin raising rates sometime next year—with the federal funds rate reaching about ½ percent by December 2011. In fact, rising rates next year has been the implicit forecast of the futures market for the past year…”

The Dismal State of Long-Term State and Local Government Finance

advancingafreesociety.org

“The disturbingly large present and prospective fiscal deficits of the federal government receive much attention, and deservedly so. Yet the financial situations of many state and local government finances are also in bad shape, and in many respects they are far more difficult to solve than are the federal fiscal problems.”

A Tough Season for Believers

nytimes.com

“Christmas is hard for everyone. But it’s particularly hard for people who actually believe in it.”

Give The People What They Want

blogs.the-american-interest.com

“In my last post I argued that Blue State Liberalism, the form of liberalism that dominated most of the twentieth century in American life, doesn’t work anymore as a political philosophy. That argument gets some powerful support from the latest Gallup polls: only 21% of Americans consider themselves liberals; 40% of Americans consider themselves ‘conservative’, and 35% call themselves ‘moderate’.  Another Gallup poll reports that 49% of Americans say that the Democrats are “too liberal”; 38% think they are just right; only 10% think Democrats aren’t liberal enough.”

On Palin’s Reading List, C.S. Lewis

online.wsj.com

“Micheal Flaherty writes in The Wall Street Journal that Chronicles of Narnia author C.S. Lewis wasn’t a children’s writer, as Sarah Palin’s critics proclaim—not by a long shot.”

The Coming Iraqi Business Boom

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Bartle Bull writes that foreigners can own 100% of Iraqi companies, must pay only a 15% flat tax on profits, and may take 100% of those profits home when and how they please.”

Review & Outlook: Ducking Higher Taxes

online.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal on Oregon’s vanishing millionaires.”

The Joy Of Stats – OpenLearn – Open University

open.ac.uk

“Join me on a fascinating journey to discover how, from crime to health, from language learning to the way science itself is conducted, the answers, the insights and yes the beauty lie in the stats.”

All the devils are here

cafehayek.com

“Latest EconTalk is Joe Nocera talking about his book (with Bethany McClean, All the Devils are Here. I learned something very important in this podcast about motives and ideology and politics. I knew it already but sometimes, a moment happens that drives something home in a way it hadn’t been solid before.”

The FCC’s Threat to Internet Freedom

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Federal Communications Commissioner Robert M. McDowell says that ‘net neutrality’ sounds nice, but the Web is working fine now. New rules will inhibit investment, deter innovation and create a billable-hours bonanza for lawyers.”

Review & Outlook: A Growth Watershed?

online.wsj.com

“The Wall Street Journal writes that On taxes, spending and ObamaCare, it was a landmark week.”

Time for Santa 2.0

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Brian Campbell says that Mr. Claus is fat, uncool and technologically backward. He also has a spotty record on animal and labor rights.”

Reaganomics 2.0 in the Driver’s Seat

www.realclearmarkets.com

“On a historic night this past Thursday, a new Tea Party Republican Congress completely transformed U.S. economic policy. Elections matter, and so do their ideas. Smaller government, low taxes, and less spending were key election themes in the Republican landslide. And those themes triumphed this wee”

Assorted Links (12/17/2010)

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

The Coming College Education Bubble – Forbes.com

forbes.com

“Higher education’s price-earnings ratio looks like Nevada housing circa 2007.”

The Economics of Seinfeld

yadayadayadaecon.com

This website uses various Seinfeld episodes to help teach the principles of economics. My favorite is the rental car episode (cf. http://bit.ly/f0lPXh) which provides a particularly vivid example of moral hazard (Hat tip to Greg Mankiw – http://bit.ly/gbpYGt).

The Argument Against Gay Marriage: And Why it Doesn’t Fail « Public Discourse

www.thepublicdiscourse.com

“Last week we released our Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy article, “What is Marriage?” It offers a robust defense of the conjugal view of marriage as the union of husband and wife, and issues specific intellectual challenges to those who propose to redefine civil marriage to accommodate same-sex partnerships.”

Charles Krauthammer – The new comeback kid

washingtonpost.com

“Don’t be fooled by thin-skinned temperament; Obama is a very smart man.”

The Case for Adoption

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, NPR’s Scott Simon writes that the story of the baby boy who was floated into the bulrushes along the Nile reminds us that the instinct to care for castaway children is ancient and inborn.”

Republicans and the Spending Dope

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Potomac Watch columnist Kimberley Strassel notes that the trillion-dollar omnibus spending bill is the first big test of GOP resolve.”

America’s best and worst commutes

bundle.com

Gulp… My hometown of Austin, TX, ranks only marginally better than Los Angeles and Houston. Are you kidding???

Depression era Americans were optimistic, pro-fascism

economist.com

“PEW has published a write-up of Gallup survey results from 1936 and 1937 in an effort to determine whether Americans are reacting differently to economic hardship now than they did in the Great Depression. Somewhat, says Pew: [D]espite their far higher and longer-lasting record of unemployment, Depression-era Americans remained hopeful for the future. About half (50%) expected general business conditions to improve over the next six months, while only 29% expected a worsening. And fully 60% thought that opportunities for getting ahead were better (45%) or at least as good (15%) as in their father’s day. Today’s public is far gloomier about the economic outlook: Only 35% in an  October Pew Research Center survey expected better economic conditions by October 2011, while 16% expected a still weaker economy.”

“Surplus Population”? Sorry, Mr. Scrooge, But You’re Mistaken

blogs.forbes.com

“If they would rather die,” said Scrooge, “they had better do it, and decrease the surplus population.”—from Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol. These were very cold words from a very cold character that has come to epitomize callousness and indifference in the popular mind… Scrooge the critic of the “surplus population” was mistaken.  Nonetheless, if public debate about “overpopulation” is any indication, we condemn Scrooge for his virtues and agree with him (whether we acknowledge it or not) on population.”

Freakonomics Radio: Do More Expensive Wines Taste Better?

freakonomics.nytimes.com

“When you take a sip of Cabernet, what are you tasting? The grape? The tannins? The oak barrel? Or the price? Believe it or not, the most dominant flavor may be the dollars. Thanks to the work of some intrepid and wine-obsessed economists (yes, there is an American Association of Wine Economists), we are starting to gain a new understanding of the relationship between wine, critics and consumers.”

The Reality of the Tax Deal – Robert P. Murphy – Mises Daily

mises.org

Mr. Murphy raises some interesting concerns, based upon basic price theory, that an unintended consequence of cutting the payroll tax may be to cause the headline unemployment rate to “stubbornly” refuse to fall – or possibly even increase.

How the West grew rich – Washington Times

washingtontimes.com

“The idea that America and the West grew rich through oppression and exploitation is strongly held among many intellectuals and activists. In the West, the exploitation thesis is invoked, by Jesse Jackson and others, to demand the payment of hundreds of billions of dollars in reparations for slavery and colonialism to African-Americans and natives of the Third World… Did the West enrich itself at the expense of minorities and the Third World through its distinctive crimes of slavery and colonialism?”

The GOP Charge Up Capitol Hill

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Fred Barnes writes that come January, House Republicans will mount a far-reaching assault on the Democratic policies of the last two years.”

Money Out the Fenêtre

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Jim Sollisch writes that budget cuts are forcing colleges to end foreign-language requirements, and it’s about time.”

What Are Taxes For

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Wonder Land columnist Daniel Henninger asks: Should the primary purpose of taxation be to support the government or to maximize economic growth?”