Category Archives: Assorted Links

Assorted Links (6/20/2010)

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

The Benefits of the Financial Crisis – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“In an excerpt from Capitalism 4.0, Anatole Kaletsky says the financial crisis is leading to a new model of capitalism.”

The Case for Having More Kids – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“Social science says kids drain their parents’ happiness, but good parenting is less work and more fun than people think. Economist Bryan Caplan makes the case for having more children.”

CNBC’s Nesto Accuses Obama of Creating ‘His Own Sense of a Legal System’ – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“Reporter insists legal framework already in place to resolve oil spill claims, asks why White House has ‘a gun to the head’ of BP.”

Obamacare and its Impact on Doctors – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“Congress needs to start over with health-care reform and get it right.” 

Suspect Estimates of Sex Trafficking at the World Cup – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“Evidence to support an estimate suggesting that 40,000 sex workers could be trafficked into South Africa during the World Cup is scant, say researchers, and the real number is likely far smaller.”

Alan Greenspan: U.S. Debt and the Greece Analogy – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan says that we shouldn’t be fooled by today’s low interest rates. The government could very quickly discover the limits of its borrowing capacity.”

Ethnic attacks in Kyrgyzstan – The Big Picture – Boston.com

boston.com

“Beginning one week ago, thousands of young Kyrgyz men rampaged through parts of southern Kyrgyzstan with weapons and torches, attacking ethnic Uzbek neighborhoods, burning homes and stores, and, according to reports, beating, raping and killing Uzbek residents. … ”

Op-Ed Columnist – Trim the ‘Experts,’ Trust the Locals – NYTimes.com

nytimes.com

“The chaotic organization of the federal oil spill cleanup effort highlights the need for increased local control.”

Charles Krauthammer – Obama and the vision thing

www.washingtonpost.com

“Obama is world-historical, the visionary, come to make oceans recede and the planet heal.”

Battle For The House Is This Close | The New Republic

www.tnr.com  

“If we project the 1994 loss probabilities onto the 2010 distribution of Democratic seats in terms of party strength and incumbency status, we would expect Democrats to lose 42 of their current seats in November. Since Democrats are given a good chance of picking up at least three current Republican seats (one each in …Hawaii and Louisiana and the at-large seat in Delaware), we would expect a net loss of 39 House seats, leaving Republicans with the narrowest possible majority: 218 seats to 217 for the Democrats.”

Pizza, Long-Distance Calls, and the End of Free Checking – Business – The Atlantic

www.theatlantic.com

“As a child of the 1980s, I have never paid for a bank account…”

Spending Binge, Part Deux – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“Stephen Moore writes in The Wall Street Journal that fiscal schizophrenia reigns in the White House.”

Predicting the Financial Crisis: A Q&A With Fault Lines Author Raghuram Rajan – Freakonomics Blog -.

www.nytimes.com

“Rajan on the crisis.”

Home Ownership in the U.S.: Rethinking Big Part of the American Dream – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“The American approach to home ownership and mortgages needs to be reconsidered, as the dream of owning a home turns into a nightmare of debt and foreclosure for many.”

Environmentalists as Battered Spouses — The American, A Magazine of Ideas

www.american.com

“Greens keep returning to their abuser after another promise to do good, but nothing in President Obama’s oil spill speech should offer them any hope that the administration is really going to change.”

Assorted Links (6/16/2010)

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

Douglas E. Schoen and Patrick H. Caddell: The United States of Throw the Bums Out – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“In the Wall Street Journal, Douglas Schoen and Patrick Caddell write that the best thing Republicans have going for them among voters is that they’re not Democrats.”

Daniel Henninger: The President’s Animosities – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Wonder Land columnist Daniel Henninger says that BP isn’t the only business President Obama has been beating up on.”

Map: Where Americans Are Moving – Forbes.com

www.forbes.com

“More than 10 million Americans moved from one county to another during 2008. The map below visualizes those moves. Click on any county to see comings and goings: black lines indicate net inward movement, red lines net outward movement.”

‘I Will Not Settle for Inaction’ – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“Is Obama really doing everything in his power to fight the spill?”

How Much Will BP Really Pay? – Room for Debate Blog – NYTimes.com

nytimes.com

“How does the public ensure that it doesn’t end up paying for costs of the spill 20 or 30 years out?


European flooding – The Big Picture – Boston.com


boston.com


“Over the past month, heavy rainfall from different storms across parts of Europe has caused massive amounts of flooding – some water moving slowly across river plains and farmland, some moving swiftly through cities and villages.”


Oil Talk – WSJ.com


online.wsj.com


“The Wall Street Journal writes that President Obama is trying to link the Gulf gusher to his moribund green agenda.”


Oil spill crisis as opportunity|KeithHennessey.com


KeithHennessey.com


“The President’s Oval Office address last night suggests an implementation of this principle, as he tries to reconfigure the climate change / cap-and-trade debate into a new War on Fossil Fuels.”


The Economics of Libertarianism, Revealed – Economix Blog – NYTimes.com


nytimes.com


“When government action is required, libertarian solutions can be hard to discern clearly, an economist writes.”


Migration: Texas, here we come | The Economist


Economist.com


“IN THE ten years I’ve lived in New York I forgot how to drive. Lately I’ve been spending lots of time in Austin, Texas. Enough so that I’ve had to start driving again. When you go many years without driving, it becomes terrifying.”


Burying the Incumbent Protection Racket — The American, A Magazine of Ideas


american.com


“Although only 14 percent of the public approves of Congress, in an ordinary year 95 percent of all incumbents are re-elected. How is this possible?”


Richard A. Epstein: BP Doesn’t Deserve a Liability Cap – WSJ.com


online.wsj.com


“Richard Epstein writes in The Wall Street Journal that solid insurance underwriting is likely to do a better job in pricing risk than any program of direct government oversight.”


Creating the Next Crisis – Project Syndicate


project-syndicate.org


“With the Obama administration rejecting what it once supported – the breakup of megabanks that are too big to fail – we are setting ourselves up for another boom based on excessive and reckless risk-taking at the heart of the world’s financial system. This can end only one way: badly.”


Why Relaxing Is Hard Work – WSJ.com


online.wsj.com


“Some people are so addicted to the adrenaline rush of stress that they gravitate to high-pressure jobs, take on too much or leave projects to the last minute.Put them on a beach for a week, and it’s no wonder they can’t relax.”


Op-Ed Columnist – The Larger Struggle – NYTimes.com


nytimes.com


“A rivalry is growing between democratic capitalist and state capitalist systems.”

Assorted Links (6/9/2010)

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

Rory Sutherland: Sweat the small stuff | Video on TED.com
www.ted.com
“It may seem that big problems require big solutions, but ad man Rory Sutherland says many flashy, expensive fixes are just obscuring better, simpler answers. To illustrate, he uses behavioral economics and hilarious examples.”

If Morgan Stanley Caused The Oil Spill – Forbes.com
www.forbes.com
“In time we’ll learn how to prevent another Deepwater Horizon oil spill. What about another financial crisis?”

Preparing for the World Cup – The Big Picture – Boston.com
boston.com
“Next Friday, June 11th, South Africa will step onto the world stage as host nation of the 2010 FIFA World Cup as the international soccer tournament begins – welcoming 32 teams from around the world.”

Are Government Workers Underpaid? No — The American, A Magazine of Ideas
american.com
“Once all promised benefits are included, government employees at all levels—local, state, and federal—receive significantly greater total compensation than private-sector workers.”

Charles E.F. Millard: The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation Is Billions in Deficit – WSJ.com
online.wsj.com
“In The Wall Street Journal, Charles E.F. Millard says the PBGC, which guarantees private pensions, is deeply underfunded and may not be able to meet its obligations to retirees.”

Dorothy Rabinowitz: The Alien in the White House – WSJ.com
online.wsj.com
“Dorothy Rabinowitz writes in The Wall Street Journal that the distance between the president and the people is beginning to be revealed.”

Scott Gottlieb: Two Steps Forward in the War Against Cancer – WSJ.com
online.wsj.com
“Scott Gottlieb writes in The Wall Street Journal that the time from lab to market for new drugs keeps getting shorter, but bad government policies threaten to reverse this trend.”

Feel the Rage – WSJ.com
online.wsj.com
“The Wall Street Journal writes that liberals who are assaulting President Obama and government over the Gulf oil spill have discovered conservatives’ critique of the regulatory state.”

A Self-Appointed Teacher Runs a One-Man ‘Academy’ on YouTube – Technology – The Chronicle of Higher Education
chronicle.com
“Salman Khan, a former financial analyst, has created 1,400 educational videos and posted them to YouTube. “My single biggest goal is to try to deliver things the way I wish they were delivered to me,” he says.”

The new Democratic claim about job creation
keithhennessey.com
“A new claim about job creation appears to be bubbling up through the Democratic ranks. Here is the clearest statement of that claim, from Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL) on Stuart Varney’s show:”

Responding to the President’s Carnegie Mellon economic speech|KeithHennessey.com
keithhennessey.com
“Yesterday I tried to neutrally summarize the President’s 5,000+ words economic speech delivered last week at Carnegie Mellon University. Today I’ll give my views on the substance.”

Okrent on Prohibition and His Book, Last Call
www.econtalk.org
“Daniel Okent, author of Last Call: The Rise and Fall of Prohibition, talks about the book with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. They discuss how the 18th Amendment banning the manufacture, sale, and transport of intoxicating beverages came to pass in 1920, what life was like while it was in force, and how the Amendment cam…e to be repealed in 1934. Okrent discusses how Prohibition became entangled with the suffrage movement, the establishment of the income tax, and anti-immigration sentiment. They also discuss the political economy of prohibition, enforcement, and repeal–the quintessential example of bootleggers and baptists.”

Assorted Links (6/8/2010)

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

Bob Doll: The Bullish Case for U.S. Equities – WSJ.com

Source: online.wsj.com

“In the Wall Street Journal Bob Doll of BlackRock writes that even though America faces long-term problems, our economy is making extraordinary improvements, especially compared to Europe.”

Daniel Klein: Are You Smarter Than a Fifth Grader? – WSJ.com

Source: online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Daniel B. Klein writes that self-identified liberals and Democrats do badly on questions of basic economics.”

Cliff Notes: The President’s Carnegie Mellon economic speech|KeithHennessey.com

Source: keithhennessey.com

“Last Wednesday the President spoke about the economy at Carnegie Mellon University. Administration officials billed this as a major economic address, the follow-up to his speech last April at Georgetown. …”

Remembering D-Day, 66 years ago – The Big Picture – Boston.com

Source: www.boston.com

“Yesterday was June 6th, the 66th anniversary of the successful 1944 Allied invasion of France. Several operations were combined to carry out the largest amphibious invasion in history – over 160,000 troops landed on June 6th, assisted by over 5,000 ships, aerial bombardment, gliders and paratroopers…”

Eliot Cohen: With Friends Like the United States . . . – WSJ.com

Source: online.wsj.com

“Eliot A. Cohen writes in The Wall Street Journal that President Obama’s foreign policy approach has emboldened America’s adversaries and unnerved its allies.”

Even Technologists Can’t Predict the Future – WSJ.com

Source: online.wsj.com

“Information Age columnist Gordon Crovitz reports on The Wall Street Journal’s annual All Things Digital Conference held in California last week.”

Richard Florida: Homeownership Is Overrated – WSJ.com

Source: online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Richard Florida says that government attempts to ratchet up the percentage of Americans owning homes is a mistake, and trap people who need to be able to move where the opportunities are. Today’s economy requires a more mobile workforce, he says.”

Fred Barnes: Does Obama Want the Congressional Democrats to Lose the Midterm Elections – WSJ.com

Source: online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Fred Barnes says that a presidential pivot to the center (and re-election) would be easier without House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.”

The St. Petersburg Paradox: a flimsy critique of expectation theory by people who don’t know math or economics

Source: mindyourdecisions.com

“As someone who uses math and economics for a living, I come across many opposing arguments. There are always people who wish to prove to me economics is fundamentally flawed.”

The Federal Takeover of Journalism

Source: jeffreymiron.com

“Yes, I know that sounds hyperbolic, but consider the title of a new discussion draft from the staff of the Federal Trade Commission…”

Does the Internet Make You Smarter? – WSJ.com

Source: online.wsj.com

“Amid the silly videos and spam are the roots of a new reading and writing culture, says Clay Shirky.”

Does the Internet Make You Dumber? – WSJ.com

Source: online.wsj.com

“A growing body of scientific evidence suggests that the Internet, with its constant distractions and interruptions, is turning us into scattered and superficial thinkers, says Nicholas Carr.”

Assorted Links (6/5/2010)

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

 
Hard Times, Bright Futures — The American, A Magazine of Ideas
www.american.com
“Robert Reich and others think the latest crop of America’s entrepreneurs is teeming with the out-of-work and desperate. We’re not so sure.”
 
Self-Reported Economic-Impact Estimates Deserve Scrutiny – The Numbers Guy – WSJ
blogs.wsj.com
“Reports from Google and from Super Bowl host cities’ bid committees that they provide big economic boosts appear to be overstated.”
 
Arthur Brooks: Slouching Towards Athens – WSJ.com
online.wsj.com
“In The Wall Street Journal, American Enterprise Institute President Arthur Brooks says the Obama agenda will make America look more like Greece, and turn tea partiers into the kind of public sector workers who strike and riot in Athens for higher pay.”
 
Employers on Strike – WSJ.com
online.wsj.com
“The Wall Street Journal writes on the May jobs report and notes that most of the jobs added were from temporary census workers.”
 
freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com
“Fred Shapiro traces the origins of popular quotes.”
 
Capitalism: Hollywood’s Miscast Villain – WSJ.com
online.wsj.com
“Why the film industry is so good at getting business wrong.”
 
motherjones.com
“Does “The Shack” offer answers to Christianity’s most vexing question?”
 
Athens on the Potomac — The American, A Magazine of Ideas
www.american.com
“Paul Krugman is right: America isn’t Greece. That doesn’t mean we aren’t in worrisome shape. And by one measure, we are in worse shape than Greece.”
 
Book review: The Shallows – WSJ.com
online.wsj.com
“John Horgan reviews Nicholas Carr’s The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brains.”
 
Mitch Daniels: Hoosiers vs. Crony Capitalism – WSJ.com
online.wsj.com
“Indiana Gov. Mitch Daniels writing in The Wall Street Journal on how creditors in his state took on the federal government in the Supreme Court and helped restored the rule of law after last year’s Chrysler bailout.”
 
online.wsj.com
“In The Wall Street Journal, Potomac Watch columnist Kimberley Strassel wonders if the White House dealings with Joe Sestak and Andrew Romanoff violates the Hatch Act.”
 
Why We Can’t Just Keep Raising Taxes on the Rich – Business – The Atlantic

www.theatlantic.com

“One thing about taxes that most people don’t find intuitive is that the higher they are, the harder…”
 
Burton G. Malkiel: Entitlement Reform and the Global Budget Crisis – WSJ.com
online.wsj.com
“Burton G. Malkiel writes in The Wall Street Journal that putting Social Security on a sustainable path isn’t nearly enough to end our entitlement shortfall. But it would do a lot to convince markets that Washington can be serious.”
 
Daniel Henninger: Beating Up on Israel – WSJ.com
online.wsj.com
“Daniel Henninger writes in The Wall Street Journal that preferring to be blowhards than statesmen, the world’s powers find it easier to denounce small nations like Israel than take on large and difficult problems like Iran or North Korea.”

Assorted Links (6/3/2010)

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

Burton G. Malkiel: Entitlement Reform and the Global Budget Crisis – WSJ.com
Source: online.wsj.com
“Burton G. Malkiel writes in The Wall Street Journal that putting Social Security on a sustainable path isn’t nearly enough to end our entitlement shortfall. But it would do a lot to convince markets that Washington can be serious.”

Daniel Henninger: Beating Up on Israel – WSJ.com
Source: online.wsj.com
 
A Gulf Spill Reality Check – Forbes.com
Source: blogs.forbes.com
 
How Washington Just Worsened the Gulf Oil Spill
Source: www.american.com
 
Source: online.wsj.com
 
A rough week for Guatemala – The Big Picture – Boston.com
Source: www.boston.com
 
Paul Ingrassia: The Lessons of the GM Bankruptcy – WSJ.com
Source: online.wsj.com
 
Source: www.nytimes.com
 
The BP Oil Spill’s Lessons for Regulation – Project Syndicate
Source: www.project-syndicate.org
 
The Gulf Spill and Alaska – WSJ.com
Source: online.wsj.com
 
Source: w4.stern.nyu.edu
“The derivatives rules in the Senate financial reform bill pose a serious threat to the financial system because they leave critical institutions – including but not limited to derivatives clearinghouses – without a lender of last resort. A major feature of the legislation prohibits any “swaps entity” from receiving federal assistance such as deposit insurance or access to the Federal Reserve’s lending facilities. The bill will force banks to spin off their derivatives activities into separate corporate entities. Yet, sweeping the risks inherent in derivatives trading off bank balance sheets does not make them disappear.”    
 
Source: freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com
 
Source: mises.org
 
Source: www.computerworld.com

Assorted Links (5/22/2010)

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

Report: Majority Of Government Doesn’t Trust Citizens Either
Source: www.theonion.com
“According to the poll – which surveyed members of the judicial, legislative, and executive branches – 9 out of 10 government officials reported feeling “disillusioned” by the populace and claimed to have “completely lost confidence” in the citizenry’s ability to act in the nation’s best interests.”
From The Onion…

A Pessimistic View of the Health Care System
Source: jeffreymiron.com
“Regarding the changes taking place in health care, from a physician’s perspective I think that our pay will be cut, the patient loads will be much higher, we will continue to face frivolous lawsuits, the …”

Public Pensions Headed for Disaster – Business – The Atlantic

Source: www.theatlantic.com
“The New York Times has a practically libertarian-sounding article on public pensions.”

Edward Jay Epstein: Goldman and Washington’s Wall Street Takeover – WSJ.com
Source: online.wsj.com
“In The Wall Street Journal, Edward Jay Epstein says that the SEC case that Goldman Sachs defrauded investors in its Abacus 2007-AC1 fund is weak, but it has helped the government justify sweeping new powers over the financial industry.”

Peter J. Wallison: Republicans and Obama’s New Deal – WSJ.com

Source: online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, AEI senior fellow Peter J. Wallison says that the GOP should have filibustered and never allowed the Dodd bill to reach the Senate floor.”

John C. Goodman: Goodbye, Employer-Sponsored Insurance – WSJ.com
Source: online.wsj.com
“In The Wall Street Journal, John C. Goodman writes that companies are discovering that it’s cheaper to pay fines to the government than to cover workers.”

Mortimer Zuckerman: The Bankrupting of America – WSJ.com
Source: online.wsj.com
“In The Wall Street Journal, Mortimer Zuckerman writes that we have a ruinous collaboration of elected officials and unionized public workers.”

Can you tell the difference between real and “fake” stock prices? New study says that most people can

Source: mindyourdecisions.com

“There’s a neat online video game that tests whether you can identify real stock data from randomized, generated data. The game is called ARORA, an abbreviation for “a random or real array” of prices.”

The Reduced Credit Act – WSJ.com
Source: online.wsj.com
“The Wall Street Journal writes that an amendment to the financial reform bill in the Senate would give banks another reason not to lend.”

Bruised but Not Out: A Bullish View on the Future of Financial Innovation
Source: knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu
“The Great Recession has given a black eye to the tools of financial innovation. Collateralized debt obligations, synthetic derivatives and other once-arcane investment vehicles are now the poster boys …”

Making the Simple Complicated – Economix Blog – NYTimes.com

Source: economix.blogs.nytimes.com

“Domestic legislation to tax the economic damage wrought by greenhouse gases is problematic, an economist says.”

Management: Pithy questions | The Economist
Source: www.economist.com
“This paper presents a market equilibrium model of CEO assignment, pay and incentives under risk aversion and heterogeneous moral hazard. Each of the three outcomes can be summarized by a single closed-form equation.”

An Enduring Culture of Free Enterprise – The American, A Magazine of Ideas

Source: www.american.com
“Despite the bruising it has taken, support for free enterprise and the capitalist system remains robust.”

The Clearinghouse Rescue Plan
Source: online.wsj.com
“As miracle cures go, clearinghouses for derivatives seem to be everyone’s favorite. By requiring that most swap contracts be settled daily through institutions that collect and spread financial risk, Congress and Treasury claim that we can all sleep better at night without fear of more AIGs.  Sorry to break this reverie, but if this is true, why does Senator Chris Dodd’s financial bill give clearinghouses access to the Federal Reserve’s discount window? That’s the special Fed lending facility that is typically available only to banks that can’t get the funding they need elsewhere. Does the Senator know something most Americans do not?”

Obama and the ‘Special Relationship’
Source: online.wsj.com
“In stark contrast to the stratospheric hopes that Mr. Obama would dramatically improve America’s relations with the world in general and the U.K. in particular, a full 74% of the British people now think that their relationship with the U.S. has stayed the same or even worsened since Mr. Obama’s election.”

The IRS Cracks Down on Small Charities
Source: online.wsj.com
“For many small charities in the United States, May 17 may be remembered as the day their tax exemptions died. This was the deadline for charities with annual revenues of less than $25,000 to file Form 990 with the IRS.”

Vanguard’s Bailout Warning
Source: online.wsj.com
“Speaking of too big to fail (see above), Senate Democrats continue to claim that their pending financial reform bill will end bailouts. But when even a potential beneficiary is warning about the financial favoritism that will result, taxpayers have every right to demand that Senators scrap their “resolution process” for too-big-to-fail banks.”

Politicians As Plutocrats

Source: online.wsj.com

“As ‘state capitalism’ grows abroad, state intervention in the economy grows at home.”

Micro-Managing Again!

Source: w4.stern.nyu.edu

Quoting from this article, written by finance professor Robert Whitelaw at NYU, “You might think that the Senate has enough to do attempting to save the country from another financial crisis. Measuring and regulating systemic risk, orderly liquidation of failing financial institutions, Freddie and Fannie, rating agencies–the list of critical issues is long and the problems are complex. However, significant regulatory reform is apparently not enough to keep our diligent Senators busy. A couple of weeks ago Senator Tom Harkin took the time out to propose capping ATM fees, and this past week the Senate approved an amendment put forward by Senator Richard Durbin to reduce the “swipe fees” that banks and other companies charge on credit and debit card transactions.”

Mount St. Helens, 30 years ago – The Big Picture – Boston.com
Source: www.boston.com
“On May 18th, 1980, thirty years ago today, at 8:32 a.m., the ground shook beneath Mount St. Helens in Washington state as a magnitude 5.1 earthquake struck, setting off one of the largest landslides in recorded history – the entire north slope of the volcano slid away.”

Massachusetts Insurers Post Big Losses – Business – The Atlantic

Source: www.theatlantic.com
“When MassCare passed, it was supposed to lower the average cost of healthcare by getting relatively cheap young people into the system, and ending the inefficiencies of caring for the uninsured.  Unfortunately, it hasn’t quite worked out that way.”

Scott Gottlieb: No, You Can’t Keep Your Health Plan – WSJ.com
Source: online.wsj.com
“In the Wall Street Journal, Dr. Scott Gottlieb writes that insurers and doctors are already consolidating their businesses in response to Obamacare.”

Moheb Zaki: Egypt’s Persecuted Christians – WSJ.com

Source: online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Moheb Zaki of the Ibn Khaldun Center in Cairo notes that violence against Copts is on the rise, yet all but ignored by the state.”

John H. Cochrane: Greek Myths and the Euro Tragedy – WSJ.com

Source: online.wsj.com

“John H. Cochrane writes in The Wall Street Journal that the Greek bail-out won’t work. Germany and France simply cannot borrow or tax enough to cover Europe’s debts and looming deficits.”

Why Does Academia Treat Its Workforce So Badly? – Business – The Atlantic
Source: www.theatlantic.com
“A piece on adjuncts in Inside Higher Ed has been attracting a lot of attention among academics of my acquaintance.”

Assorted Links (5/17/2010)

Meredith Whitney: The Small Business Credit Crunch – WSJ.com
Source: online.wsj.com
 
Source: online.wsj.com
 
Source: online.wsj.com
 
Unintended Consequences of Obamacare
Source: jeffreymiron.com
“Abortion opponents fought passage of President Barack Obama’s health care overhaul to the bitter end, and now that it’s the law, they’re using it to limit coverage by private insurers.”
 
Source: freakonomics.blogs.nytimes.com

Assorted Links (5/15/2010)

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

The Coastal Conundrum
Source: www.american.com
“The large domestic outflow from coastal metropolises is disturbing, and suggests a vote of no-confidence in our formerly fastest-growing metro areas.” 

The Weekend Interview with Thomas Hoenig: The Fed’s Monetary Dissident – WSJ.com
Source: online.wsj.com
 
Source: www.project-syndicate.org
 
How Much Transparency Do We Want in Healthcare Pricing?
Source: www.american.com
 
John Steele Gordon: Incentives vs. Government Waste – WSJ.com
Source: online.wsj.com
 

Assorted Links (5/13/2010)

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

Avoiding Fiscal Meltdown « Forbes.com’s StreetTalk

blogs.forbes.com

“There’s only only one way to achieve real deficit reduction: substantial cuts in government expenditure, especially lower government retirement and health benefits.”

Making Finance Easy to Fix, Not Hard to Break — The American, A Magazine of Ideas

www.american.com

“In the Bizzaro world of Washington, the narrative labels it ‘anti-reform’ to oppose a bill that would further entrench the people largely to blame for the financial crisis.”

Talking Sense About Global Warming – Project Syndicate

www.project-syndicate.org

“In February, 14 distinguished climate scientists, economists, and policy experts came together to discuss how to tackle global warming. The group’s report, “The Hartwell Paper,” outlines a new direction for climate policy after the collapse of last year’s attempts to negotiate a global climate deal.”

Clifford S. Asness and Aaron Brown: The Treasury-Financial Complex – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Clifford Asness and Aaron Brown of AQR Capital Management write that the Dodd bill is perfectly designed to create the largest and most powerful crony system in history.”

Ingrassia: Washington’s Bungling Auto Engineers – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, automotive journalist Paul Ingrassia notes that Congress is designing everything from the braking system in your next car to the loan with which you’ll finance it. Be very afraid.”

Dan Henninger: The We’re-Not-Europe Party – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“Daniel Henninger writes in The Wall Street Journal that any U.S. politician purporting to run the presidency of the United States should be asked why the economic policies he or she is proposing won’t take us where Europe arrived this week.”

Puerto Rico, the 51st State? – WSJ.com

online.wsj.com

“John Fund writes in The Wall Street Journal that Nancy Pelosi is trying to make add to her numbers by making Puerto Rico a state.”