(Sorry to miss last week.... I was hanging out with Marie Newhouse at Surrey U
1. Can competition stem corruption? Seems a little simplistic. In some ways corruption is a way of reducing competition, by buying favors. I have argued that corruption can make the system more efficient....Tullock was first to argue that from an economic perspective.
2. Self-check out is not in equilibrium. Something is going to change. Perhaps like this.
3. This was a great EconTalk, I thought. As was this, though for different reasons.
4. Check Figure 4 on p 32. Seriously: Check Figure 4 on p. 32.
5. All the agricultural land in the world.
6. Two things can both be true: (1) some students manipulate "accommodations" and (2) there are real problems some students face that can be debilitating and can be accommodated pretty easily. We haven't figured out the answer yet.
7. Carter Page is a bona fide idiot. Remarkable.
8. 4 ways to communicate in an on-line course. I wonder if students WANT to be in direct contact. Of course, some do. Do these work well enough?
9. I don't usually credit the "what if this were used for affordable housing instead?" kind of counterfactual. And this is largely devoid of any real economic understanding. Still: why are public funds being spent on such a ridiculous endeavor?
10. So...this. And then this. And, then, THIS. I frankly found the similarities between the second and third things a bit disturbing.
11. A not very informative but still interesting piece about my friend (and Duke parent) William Kristol.
12. And while we're reading the NYer, a very informative and even more interesting piece on what it means to die....or live.
13. Will Wilkinson on taxes, and colors on maps.
14. Armenian Rhapsody....
15. I have long worried about the tendency of libertarians to blame enforcement agencies, rather than policy-makers, for dumb laws. If you approve of what is being done to the FBI, then...well, you and I disagree.
16. Well, so THAT's good! No, it's bad.
17. More power is not always better....
18. Free markets fail the poor, as shown by that famously unregulated "market," public housing.
19. Did they really think that this would be a successful, admired commercial?
20. On the other hand, well done, Very well done,
Grand Lagniappe: Wedu Nagivafaka. From Hawaii. Enjoy!
1. Can competition stem corruption? Seems a little simplistic. In some ways corruption is a way of reducing competition, by buying favors. I have argued that corruption can make the system more efficient....Tullock was first to argue that from an economic perspective.
2. Self-check out is not in equilibrium. Something is going to change. Perhaps like this.
3. This was a great EconTalk, I thought. As was this, though for different reasons.
4. Check Figure 4 on p 32. Seriously: Check Figure 4 on p. 32.
5. All the agricultural land in the world.
6. Two things can both be true: (1) some students manipulate "accommodations" and (2) there are real problems some students face that can be debilitating and can be accommodated pretty easily. We haven't figured out the answer yet.
7. Carter Page is a bona fide idiot. Remarkable.
8. 4 ways to communicate in an on-line course. I wonder if students WANT to be in direct contact. Of course, some do. Do these work well enough?
9. I don't usually credit the "what if this were used for affordable housing instead?" kind of counterfactual. And this is largely devoid of any real economic understanding. Still: why are public funds being spent on such a ridiculous endeavor?
10. So...this. And then this. And, then, THIS. I frankly found the similarities between the second and third things a bit disturbing.
11. A not very informative but still interesting piece about my friend (and Duke parent) William Kristol.
12. And while we're reading the NYer, a very informative and even more interesting piece on what it means to die....or live.
13. Will Wilkinson on taxes, and colors on maps.
14. Armenian Rhapsody....
15. I have long worried about the tendency of libertarians to blame enforcement agencies, rather than policy-makers, for dumb laws. If you approve of what is being done to the FBI, then...well, you and I disagree.
16. Well, so THAT's good! No, it's bad.
17. More power is not always better....
18. Free markets fail the poor, as shown by that famously unregulated "market," public housing.
19. Did they really think that this would be a successful, admired commercial?
20. On the other hand, well done, Very well done,
Grand Lagniappe: Wedu Nagivafaka. From Hawaii. Enjoy!
1 comment:
I listened to the EconTalk with Ioannidis a few days ago. It was well worth the time.
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