Category Archives: Assorted Links

Assorted Links (2/15/2013)

Here’s a list of articles that I have been reading, podcasts that I have been listening to, and videos that I have been watching lately:

Obama’s Executive Death Warrants

www.cato.org

“Can a president really serve as judge, jury and executioner over any American he deems a security threat?”

From His Very First State of the Union Utterance, President Obama Got It Wrong

www.cato.org

By Roger Pilon

“Not since FDR have we had a president with so little appreciation for our basic constitutional system, or so little understanding of basic economics.”

Obama’s Minimum Wage Plan

www.cato.org

“President Obama’s new proposal to raise the federal minimum wage would bad for workers and the economy, but the administration seems to be ignoring the large body of theory and evidence on the issue.” Cato (correctly) notes that “President Obama’s plan to raise the minimum wage ignores 70 years of economic research.”

Four Key Questions for Health-Care Law

“The success or failure of the Affordable Care Act relies on what employers, individuals and states do in the next few years. David Wessel takes a look at what each will do.”

Small Acts, Big Love

online.wsj.com

“University of Rochester study finds people who put their spouses needs first make themselves happier too.”

Freakonomics Radio – How to Think About Guns

www.wnyc.org

“No one wants mass shootings. Unfortunately, no one has a workable plan to stop them either.” This is definitely worth spending thirty minutes listening to. Freakonomics is really good at exposing the “the hidden side of everything” – particularly unintended consequences of public policy initiatives…

Minimum Wage Wars Round 23

www.freakonomics.com

“President Obama has proposed increasing the federal minimum wage from $7.25 to $9. Since the demand for low-skilled labor is quite elastic, this will kill off a few jobs that would otherwise have been created. Not very many, because relatively few people would otherwise be paid between $7.25 and $9 anyway (in an economy with an average wage of about $20/hour); but this is a job-killing idea.”

State of the Union 2013: AEI scholars respond

AEI President Arthur Brooks writes, “What did AEI scholars think of the president’s State of the Union address? Watch this quick video for play-by-play commentary on a variety of issues from entitlement and immigration reform to minimum wage hikes and gun control.”

Households On Foodstamps Rise To New Record

www.zerohedge.com

“Since Obama’s first inauguration, the US has generated 841,000 new jobs through November 2012. That number is dwarfed by the 17.3 million new food stamp and disability recipients added to the rolls over the same time period.”

So God Made a Fawner

online.wsj.com

“Paul Harvey’s ad was terrific, Peggy Noonan write, but Steve Kroft’s interview was shameful.”  Peggy Noonan opines that the Fourth Estate is in a particularly bad state these days…

When Species Extermination Is a Good Thing

online.wsj.com

“Foundations tied to Bill Gates and Jimmy Carter report progress.” Interesting article by Matt Ridley, author of The Rational Optimist and various other tomes. He’s sort of in a similar category as writers like Malcolm Gladwell and Michael Lewis…

Work Disincentives, Still Crazy After All These Years

online.wsj.com

“Economist Art Laffer writes that, in the spirit of Jack Kemp, a pro-growth agenda is needed for America’s pockets of poverty.”  Dr. Laffer runs the numbers and finds that “…People with low incomes who receive various forms of welfare subsidies in any number of states—with and without children, whether married or not—face enormous disincentives in trying to improve their lives by working.”

Dr. Benjamin Carson’s Speech at the National Prayer Breakfast (February 7, 2013)

video.foxnews.com

“Pediatric neurosurgeon targets political correctness in National Prayer Breakfast speech.” Besides being a gifted and inspiring speaker, Dr. Carson is also an accomplished neurosurgeon who is famous for his ground-breaking work separating conjoined twins (see http://www.biography.com/people/ben-carson-475422). For the Wall Street Journal’s take on Dr. Carson’s speech, see “Ben Carson for President” @ http://on.wsj.com/WBmGGh.

Bernie Movie – Map of Texas

“Carthage, TX resident describes the ‘5 States’ of Texas.”  This is a succinct and highly informative explanation of Texas for non-Texans!

Should States Participate in the Medicaid Expansion?

blogs.baylor.edu

As my Baylor colleague, economics professor James Henderson notes, “Only 18 states have agreed to expand the Medicaid program according to Obamacare guidelines. Is it a mistake to decline federal funding to expand a flawed program or should states accept the Faustian bargain? Short-run gain will likely translate into long-run pain for state budgets.”

Seidman on the Constitution | EconTalk

www.econtalk.org

I listened to this EconTalk episode earlier this week, which involves a lively debate (featuring a prominent constitutional law professor) concerning whether the US Constitution should be relied upon to guide the process by which laws and public policies are enacted. The official description of this podcast (taken from the EconTalk website) is as follows:

“Louis Michael Seidman of Georgetown University talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the United States Constitution. Seidman argues that the we should ignore the Constitution in designing public policy, relying instead on the merits of policy regardless of their constitutionality. Seidman defends his position by citing examples in the past where constitutionality has been ignored and says it would be better to recognize our disdain for the Constitution in a transparent way. In this lively conversation, Roberts pushes back against these ideas, citing the limits of reason and the dangers of using popular sentiment to determine policy.”

Assorted Links (1/28/2013)

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

Travis Kalanick: The Transportation Trustbuster

online.wsj.com

Travis Kalanick is the John Galt of his generation! Quoting from this article, “Andy Kessler interviews Travis Kalanick, co-founder of Uber, on how he’s bringing limo service to the urban masses—and how he learned to beat the taxi cartel and city hall.”

World War II Spending Did Not End the Great Depression

reason.com

“The aggregate statistics fail to capture essential details of life.”

Powers of prophesy: Davos looks to the future

www.stltoday.com

Interesting multidisciplinary assortment of predictions; I am especially looking forward to owning a driverless car and my own 3D printer! 🙂

The Great Migration

www.nytimes.com

“As the winners of our meritocracy hold the reins of progressive power, they may struggle to mitigate the inequality their own ascendance has helped produce.”

College Degree, No Class Time Required

online.wsj.com

“University of Wisconsin will grant bachelor’s degrees based on a person’s knowledge as demonstrated in online tests, not on class time or credits, the first such offering from a public university system.”

Revolution Hits the Universities

www.nytimes.com

“Nothing has more potential to let us reimagine higher education than massive open online course, or MOOC, platforms.”

Yes, Mr. President, We Are a Nation of Takers

online.wsj.com

“AEI scholar Nicholas Eberstadt writes that since 1960, entitlement transfers have grown twice as fast as personal income—to $2.3 trillion annually.”

Climate-Change Misdirection

professional.wsj.com

“Environmentalist Bjorn Lomborg writes that fear-mongering exaggeration about global warming distracts us from the real job of finding affordable and effective energy alternatives.”

The Collective Turn

www.nytimes.com

“President Obama’s second Inaugural Address makes a compelling case for a pragmatic and patriotic progressivism.”

In his inaugural address, Obama suggested burgeoning entitlements aren’t a problem…

www.aei-ideas.org

Excellent critique of President Obama’s second inaugural address by the AEI’s Nick Eberstadt…

Roe v. Wade at 40: Attitudes about abortion

www.aei.org

AEI just put out a very interesting and informative summary of polling data from myriad sources (on (U.S.) public attitudes toward abortion, circa 2013. Quoting fromthis article, “Although opinion about abortion is stable (over time), it is also deeply ambivalent. Americans are simultaneously pro-life and pro-choice.”

Attorney general’s Web campaign invites N.Y. gun-lovers to ‘move to Texas’

www.dallasnews.com

“The Texas attorney general has launched an Internet ad campaign inviting New Yorkers who feel their state’s new gun laws are too restrictive to move to Texas.”

Gold, Greenbacks and Inflation—A History and a Warning

professional.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, Paul Moreno writes that the Federal Reserve’s 100th birthday is no cause to break out the champagne.”

Moody’s now has negative outlook for all U.S. universities

news.yahoo.com

“Moody’s Investors Service now has a negative outlook for the entire U.S. higher education sector, the rating agency said on Wednesday, citing “mounting fiscal pressure on all key university revenue sources.”

Find the Perfect Sleep Position

online.wsj.com

“Stomach, back or side? There is no one right way to sleep. But for people with certain types of pain and medical conditions, there are positions that can help keep problems from getting worse and may even alleviate them.

The progressive US tax code

aei.org

I make similar points in my April 2011 blog posting entitled “Make the rich pay their “fair” share!” (cf. http://wp.me/pBo4U-B9) which, among other things, documents that the U.S. has by far and away the most progressive personal income tax system amongst 24 OECD countries.  Quoting from this article, “For many years, left-wing intellectuals have exalted Western Europe as the paragon of redistributive equity, contrasting it with the trickle-down nightmare that is America. But on tax policy, at least, that characterization is flat-out wrong, especially after the latest round of tax increases.”

The Wages of Unemployment

online.wsj.com

“Richard Vedder writes that labor-force participation has declined since 2000, and among the reasons are soaring government benefits. Here are some highlights:

1. There are over 30 million more Americans receiving food stamps today than in 2000 (increase from 17.1 million in 2000 to 47.5 million in October 2012).
2. Three million Americans received work-related disability checks from Social Security in 1990; this number increases to 5 million in 2000 and stands at 8.6 million today.
3. The traditional 26-week unemployment-insurance benefit has been continuously extended over the past four years—many persons out of work a year or more are still receiving benefits.”

New budget fix: Pawn Mount Rushmore?

money.msn.com

“Hey, the country has been talking about minting a massive platinum coin. Could selling a giant granite tourist trap be any more ludicrous?”

Assorted Links (1/5/2013)

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

It Pays to Be Happy

blogs.wsj.com

“Earning more money tends to make people happier, at least up to a point. But new research suggests the reverse may also be true: happier people actually make more money.”

The Cleric Behind ‘Les Mis’

online.wsj.com

“Doris Donnelly writes that novelist and poet Victor Hugo was anticlerical, yet the hero in his famous novel is set on his course by a Catholic bishop.” The following quote from this Wall Street Journal article succinctly explains the story behind Les MisĂ©rables : “During the night he spent at the bishop’s home, mere days after his release from serving 19 years as galley prisoner 24601, Jean Valjean stole six silver place settings, was apprehended, and returned the next morning under police guard to face the consequences of his crime. Unruffled, the bishop brushed off the police, added valuable silver candlesticks to the bundle, “bought” Jean Valjean’s soul from evil and claimed it for God. He redirected the life of a man chained to hatred, mistrust and anger, and he enabled Jean Valjean to emerge as one of the noblest characters in literature.”

Close Shave for Asteroid

online.wsj.com

“Asteroid 2012 DA14 will pass very close to Earth—much, much closer than the moon—on Feb. 15. Its path won’t lead to a collision with Earth, but it will pass close to a ring of orbiting satellites.”

Return of the real Obama

www.washingtonpost.com

“After the fiscal cliff, the president is free to be himself — a committed big-government social democrat.”

2 months until next budget crisis?

money.msn.com

“A prominent economist known as ‘Dr. Doom’ says the country’s budget dispute will come roaring back soon.” This (another budget crisis in 2 months’ time) seems like an eventuality, in view of the facts that 1) the fiscal cliff legislation passed 2 days ago delays $110 billion in spending cuts for two months, and 2) this is around the same time that Congress will need to debate whether or not to raise the debt ceiling… So definitely expect more 11th hour brinksmanship around the beginning of March…

The Morning Ledger: Cliff Dive Averted

online.wsj.com

For those of you who are wondering what was in the so-called fiscal cliff legislation that was literally passed last evening in the 11th (pm) hour, I recommend reading the first four paragraphs of the article “The Morning Ledger: Cliff Dive Averted” (@ http://on.wsj.com/VAkXwB). Basically we get a two month reprieve from political theater and last-minute brinksmanship. As former Obama chief of staff (and now Chicago mayor) Rahm Emanuel once famously remarked, “A crisis is a terrible thing to waste”…

Lost Decade, Revisited

professional.wsj.com

“Holman Jenkins writes that bitter politics over taxing and spending will be our lot for years to come.” Quoting from this article, “The fiscal cliff turned into just another trial of strength by advocates of the welfare state to prove the welfare state is not rationally reformable in advance of a funding crisis. But we already knew that.”

Nothing Is Certain Except More Debt and Taxes

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, David Malpass writes that the Senate fiscal-cliff bill still means higher taxes on every working American—so much for just going after ‘the rich.'”

A Tax Cuts Mystery

reason.com

“If Government spending wasn’t out of control, no one would have wanted to kill Bush tax cuts.”

Another Fiscal Flop

www.nytimes.com

“The voters get what they want.”

Hummel on Moss on Limited Liability

econlog.econlib.org

Economist JR Hummel’s informative review of David A. Moss’s book, When All Else Fails: Government as the Ultimate Risk Manager – on the history and nature of liability rules, including limited liability…

Some clear thinking on the national debt and the real fiscal problem

www.aei-ideas.org

Some clear thinking on the national debt and the real fiscal problem: Government’s spending on entitlement programs…

The Fiscal Cliff and Congress’s Dysfunction

www.cato.org

“Spending every year is now twice what it was when Bill Clinton left office, and the national debt is three times as high. Republicans and Democrats alike should be able to find wasteful, extravagant, and unnecessary programs to cut back or eliminate.”

eBay for Professors

americanradioworks.publicradio.org

Here’s the story line for this podcast: “Ever heard of the self-employed college professor? Thanks to the efforts of the for-profit education company Straighter Line, some professors will now be able to go into business for themselves and set the price on how much their teaching is worth.”

Over the Cliff at Steven Landsburg

www.thebigquestions.com

Here’s a positive spin about going over the fiscal cliff from University of Rochester economist Steven Landsburg (AKA the Armchair Economist)…

Le Tax Fairness

online.wsj.com

France’s Constitutional Court struck down the new 75% top French income tax rate, not because it is confiscatory; rather on grounds of—get this—unfairness. While it is apparently “fair” to take 75% of what someone earns, it isn’t fair unless the law confiscates 75% from all rich households equally…

Top 10 Economic Charts of 2012

blogs.wsj.com

The charts include 1) a look at what the largest and smallest parts of the economy have been, going back to 1949, 2) where Americans have been spending their money from 1901 to the present, 3) a snapshot of people moving in and out of the U.S. labor force, 4) a look back at the economic performance of the U.S. during presidents’ first terms, 5) a listing of how many weeks of unemployment benefits are offered by each state, 6) which states have the worst unemployment rates (going back to 1976), 7) the numbers behind the U.S.’s deficits, 8) how student loan debt outpaces all other forms of nonhousing consumer debt, 9) how overall food prices don’t move as much as corn prices do, and 10) how Germany’s economic performance compared to the rest of the euro zone.

Baby, You’re a Rich Man

online.wsj.com

“You don’t have to be Warren Buffett to be considered wealthy. It all depends on who is setting the bar. Here’s why it matters for your taxes, investment options and college aid—and what you can do about it.”

How to Read in 2013

www.nytimes.com

“This is the moment to get out of your rut and visit the rest of the political spectrum.” One of my New Year’s resolutions is to follow Ross Douthat’s advice to: 1) take out a subscription to a magazine whose politics I don’t share, 2) expand my reading geographically as well as ideologically, and 3) make a special effort to read entirely outside existing partisan categories.

The Most Important Speech So Far in the 21st Century?

blogs.wsj.com

George Will at Washington University in St. Louis. The transcript of Mr. Will’s speech entitled ” titled “Religion and Politics in the First Modern Nation” is available for downloading from http://rap.wustl.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/George-Will-lecture-text.pdf; the video is @ http://www.c-span.org/Events/Conversation-with-George-Will-on-Religion-in-Politics/10737436348/.

Assorted Links (12/28/2012)

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

Families Await, Lament Moscow’s Move

professional.wsj.com

“Adoptive parents in the U.S. who have been assigned to children, and in many cases have met them in Russian orphanages and have dates to bring them home, warily await the country’s proposed ban on U.S. adoptions.” This is genuinely cruel – as this article points out, Russia “… has about 120,000 registered orphans but fewer than 20,000 Russians listed as prospective adoptive families.”

Dear Mr. President, Zero-Sum Doesn’t Add Up

online.wsj.com

“In The Wall Street Journal, P.J. O’Rourke asks: Is life like a pizza, where if some people have too many slices, other people have to eat the pizza box?” As far as I am concerned, P.J. O’Rourke’s op-ed in today’s Wall Street Journal wins the award for the best op-ed ever…

Six Reasons To Keep Capital Gains Tax Rates Low

news.investors.com

“The advantages of low capital gains taxes have led many economists to call for ending these taxes altogether. Eleven OECD countries today don’t tax long-term capital gains.”  This is an Excellent tutorial on the economics of capital gains taxation. This article explains how going over the fiscal cliff will prospectively raise the cost of capital for US firms while reducing the rate of private investment and future growth prospects for the US economy…

College graduates earn 85% more than those with high school-only

www.bizjournals.com

“Adults with bachelor’s degrees in the late 1970s earned 55 percent more than adults who had not advanced beyond high school. That gap grew to 75 percent by 1990 — and is now at 85 percent. The margin is smaller, though still sizable, when adults with bachelor’s degrees are compared to counterparts …”

Port Closures Approach, As America Nears The Container Cliff

blogs.wsj.com

“It might not be as economically deadly as the tax hikes and spending cuts due on Jan. 1, but a looming crisis at America’s ports has retailers worried.” First there was a fiscal cliff, then there was a milk cliff, now we have a dock cliff. Here a cliff, there a cliff, everywhere a cliff cliff!

Hobby Lobby faces millions in fines for bucking Obamacare

religion.blogs.cnn.com

“Craft store giant Hobby Lobby is bracing for a $1.3 million a day fine beginning January 1 for noncompliance with the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, dubbed Obamacare.”

Why Celebrate Christmas When We Do?

www.firstthings.com

“It is generally believed that the birth of Christ is celebrated on December 25 because our savvy Christian forebears with a flare for marketing took over a winter solstice holiday from the surrounding pagans. Not so, apparently.”