Things to Read at Night on March 2, 2015
Must- and Shall-Reads:
- Bull Market: A collection of finance and business writing :
- “A $300 million mandatory appropriation for a new Local Housing Policy Grants program… to create a more elastic and diverse housing supply… establish a learning network that would provide ongoing capacity building to the organizations and entities to facilitate shared learning opportunities and disseminate best practices…. [NIMBYism] is… officially On The Radar Of People Who Matter…” :
- Ending the Creditor’s Paradise: What would you tell six hundred leading German social democrats about their party’s handling of the Eurocrisis? :
- Thoughts on a Post-King Health Insurance Market :
- One Wrong Sentance After Another :
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The Failure of Macroeconomics: “My beef is with macroeconomics. Olivier Blanchard, the IMF’s chief economist, recently wrote: ‘We in the field did think of the economy as roughly linear… fluctuating, but naturally returning to its steady state….’ Blanchard went on to observe that… macroeconomists… [saw] extreme tail risk events… as a thing of the past in developed countries…. Central banks could prevent or stop market ‘panics’ by flooding the place with liquidity. If you get the policy settings right, linear models will work…. The financial crisis drew to our attention… finance…. No industry that can cause such havoc when it goes wrong should ever be regarded as irrelevant or superficial…” : -
Obamacare and Long-Term Competitiveness: “The long-term economic consequences of uninsuring the many children now insured under the new health law are clear… the importance of early childhood health care for the least advantaged kids among us–on their future workforce productivity, their contributions to our national tax base, their educational attainment, and their declining use of government income supports…. Mirror the… research… I conducted with… Sandra Decker… and Wanchuan Lin…. Medicaid coverage for children born between 1985 and 2005 resulted in a better health trajectory for those kids as they because adolescents and young adults…. What will happen if less-well-off kids today do not get the affordable health care they need to become successful contributors to our economy over the coming decades?…. Children who gained public health insurance in the 1980s and 1990s… the federal government will have recouped at least 56 cents for each dollar spent on childhood health care…. Better public health care among low-income children in the 1980s and 1990s resulted in higher graduation rates from high school and college for these kids…. We already know the empirical long-term economic benefits of expanded health care for those least able to afford it–and can say with strong confidence that taking away health insurance for these five million now covered under Obamacare would harm our economy.” : -
Wealth, Inequality, and the ‘Me? I’m Not Rich!’ Problem: “The real action is at the tip-top, or the tippetty-tip-top. Think not the 1% but the 0.1% or even 0.01%…. The problem might be political rather than economic. The soar-away wealth of those at the pinnacle of the distribution can start to make the people just below them feel distinctly middle-class. I’ve just played the part of Straight Man Scholar in a sketch on “The Daily Show” poking fun at the struggles of those only just scraping into the top 1% with a family wealth of $4 million or more. “Daily Show” correspondent Hasan Minhaj became a faux class warrior on behalf of those struggling to get by with just one or two homes and having to share a private jet…” : -
Game On: “Bottom Line: The Fed’s confidence in the US economy is driving them closer to policy normalization. The labor market improvements are key – as long as unemployment is falling, confidence in the inflation outlook is rising. The more important message, however, is as the timing of the first rate hike draws closer, the level of uncertainty is rising. And it is not just about the timing of that rate hike. The Fed is sending a clear message that the subsequent path of rates is also very uncertain, and they don’t think that uncertainty is being taken seriously by market participants. In their view, financial markets are too complacent about the likely path of interest rates.” : -
The Strange Urge to Raise Rates: “Monetary policy attracts crazy people like moths to a flame: goldbugs, 100-percent-reserve-banking types, amateur historians who think they know exactly what happened when Diocletian ruled Rome…. The obsession with raising interest rates among economists who used to seem sensible…. Up to a point, Feldstein has followed the now-usual arc…. We’re talking about conservatives with vast faith in the wisdom of markets, who somehow are completely sure that markets will make terrible decisions due to low interest rates, and require paternalistic monetary policy to keep them on the strait and narrow. What really strikes me about Marty’s latest… is the muttering that there must be some sinister hidden agenda…. that central banks are operating under… a desire to help finance budget deficits. It’s very, very strange, and distressing.” : -
The Steep Path Forward for Unionization: “[Did] past research underestimated the role of the decline of unions in the rise of economic inequality[?]… Bruce Western… and Jake Rosenfeld… finds that about one-fifth to one-third of the increase in wage inequality can be explained by declining union membership…. Florence Jaumotte and Carolina Osorio Buitron…. Adam Ozimek… [however] makes a very important observation. How exactly will unions return to prominence?… What could make employment at unionized firms grow relatively faster compared to non-union firms?… Freeman… believe[s] that such an outcome is unlikely…. Yet… Freeman notes that increases in unionization rates in the past have come from large and sudden increases in union membership…. Increased unionization in the United States would almost certainly reduce wage and income inequality. But the pathway to a higher rate is steep. A sudden jump seems the only way up. But what will cause or even allow such an increase? That remains to be seen.” :
Should Be Aware of:
- “I’m still quietly reeling from Leonard Nimoy’s death on Friday…. One of the trellises on which I grew my character is gone, really gone…. my leaders and teachers are washing away before my eyes…” :
- The 7 Best Star Trek Episodes Featuring Leonard Nimoy :
- Larry Kudlow and the Failure of the Chicago School :
- GOP Economist Larry Kudlow: Bush Tax Cuts Worked Brilliantly :
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Star Trek is great, and Leonard Nimoy’s Spock was the greatest thing about it: “His lack of insight into human concepts of humor and fun could be, of course, extremely funny. But in the hands of Stark Trek’s writers, Spock’s commitment to logic over emotion was the pinnacle of heroism rather than its antithesis. He deduced an ethic of rigorous utilitarianism and lived and died according to a profoundly moral code…. Spock’s intelligence, bravery, courage, and good judgment don’t win him the universal admiration of his crewmates or of the world. But he did earn their respect, and over time he accomplished most of what he set out to do…. Over time, that turned Spock into something of a cliché. But he was an original in the 1960s, and Leonard Nimoy’s skill in defining the character helped define an entire genre of characters for generations to come…. Star Trek is beloved for good reasons, and Nimoy’s Spock is at the top of what made it great. : -
Stages of the Bubble: “And here’s a trip down memory lane: ‘A national severe price distortion seems most unlikely in the United States’ — Alan Greenspan, October 2004. ‘Homebuilders led the stock parade this week with a fantastic 11 percent gain. This is a group that hedge funds and bubbleheads love to hate. All the bond bears have been dead wrong in predicting sky-high mortgage rates. So have all the bubbleheads who expect housing-price crashes in Las Vegas or Naples, Florida, to bring down the consumer, the rest of the economy, and the entire stock market.’ — Larry Kudlow, June 2005. ‘I suspect that we are coming to the end of this downtrend, as applications for new mortgages, the most important series, have flattened out…. I think the worst of this may well be over.’ Alan Greenspan, October 2006. ‘The housing market is at or near the bottom.’ Henry Paulson, April 2007.” (2008): -
Whatever the Problem Is, Jim Webb Is Not the Solution: “Charles Pierce half-defends Jim Webb…. ‘There is no question that the Democratic party has done a god-awful job of explaining to white working people who’s screwing them and why. Most of the people who have tried that have found themselves marginalized, and not always by Republicans, either. Senator Professor Warren is one of the few of them who has managed to explain these matters in such a way that they are both easily understood, and in such a way that she doesn’t sound like she’s talking down to anyone.’… If Jim Webb can come up with concrete ways of broadening Democratic appeal to the Southern white working class, that would be great, although it would be better if he’d pass them along to someone who’s serious about running for president…” :