Things to Read at Lunchtime on December 2, 2013

Must-Reads:

  1. Henry Aaron and Harold Pollack: Now’s Now Is Not the Time for Liberals to Say “I Told You So” About Obamacare: “It has been a rough two months for the Affordable Care Act and its defenders…. The performance failures in the rollout of healthcare.gov have triggered cries of ‘I told you so!’ from some liberals. This wouldn’t have happened, they say, if only Obama had supported some form of single-payer plan, such as Medicare for all. The anger over the botched rollout is understandable, but these recriminations are poorly timed–and just plain wrong. For starters, the ACA is working reasonably well in some places–California, Connecticut, Kentucky, Washington, and the District of Columbia, for example. These under-reported success stories show that insurance exchanges can work, if properly administered…. The human benefits are real, from California to Breathitt County in rural Kentucky. These successes make the federal government’s dismal rollout even more embarrassing…. The real beef of those who seek a more radical rewiring of our healthcare system is not with the president. It is with the coalition of labor, healthcare, disability, and anti-poverty groups that coalesced during 2007 and 2008 around a health reform model that later became the ACA…. We wish ACA had gone farther. It could have provided more generous premium assistance and cost-sharing for working families. It could have allowed people near retirement to buy into Medicare. Alas, senators such as Joe Lieberman–not Obama–scuttled these possibilities. The ACA is only the first step in a long journey of needed health reforms…. There was and is no alternative to the messy incremental politics that produced Obamacare. Liberals such as then–House Majority Speaker Nancy Pelosi didn’t make unpalatable compromises because they held pallid aspirations for health reform. They compromised because they knew that they could not impose their will on querulous colleagues, because they needed 60 Senate votes, because millions of Americans needed help, and because it is better to win messily than to lose gloriously…”

  2. Ryan Avent: Economic growth: On the inevitability of justice: “The Pope… offered a lengthy statement on economic justice…. ‘Some people continue to defend trickle-down theories which assume that economic growth, encouraged by a free market, will inevitably succeed in bringing about greater justice and inclusiveness in the world…This opinion, which has never been confirmed by the facts, expresses a crude and naive trust in the goodness of those wielding economic power and in the sacra­lized workings of the prevailing economic system.’ On Saturday Greg Mankiw… weighed in…. ‘It is sad to see the pope using a pejorative, rather than encouraging an open-minded discussion of opposing perspectives.Third, as far as I know, the pope did not address the tax-exempt status of the church. I would be eager to hear his views on that issue. Maybe he thinks the tax benefits the church receives do some good when they trickle down.’ This is just the sort of response that leads non-economists to detest economists: condescending, callous, and, worst of all, intellectually lazy. It is also an example of some truly epic point-missing…. The Pope does not appear to be attacking growth. Rather, he is attacking the view that ‘economic growth, encouraged by a free market, will inevitably succeed in bringing about greater justice and inclusiveness in the world’…. Mankiw… certainly seems to be displaying precisely the viewpoint that the Pope is warning about: don’t worry about the outcomes of growth (and for heaven’s sake don’t do anything about them), because growth is pretty rad. But let’s be clear. Historically it has taken quite a lot of hard work to ensure that economic growth does bring about greater justice and inclusiveness…. Mankiw might argue that growth enabled the generosity the led to social pressure for change…. If you want to praise growth as justice-enhancing because growth improves our moral intuition, then you also have to praise those who act on their moral intuition in an effort to create institutions that deliver greater justice. Mr Mankiw would rather be snide and complain that the Pope is name-calling…”

Should-Reads:

  1. George W. Evans, Eran Guse, and Seppo Honkapohja (2007): Liquidity Traps, Learning and Stagnation: “We examine global economic dynamics under learning in a New Keynesian model in which the interest-rate rule is subject to the zero lower bound. Under normal monetary and fiscal policy, the intended steady state is locally but not globally stable. Large pessimistic shocks to expectations can lead to deflationary spirals with falling prices and falling output. To avoid this outcome we recommend augmenting normal poli- cies with aggressive monetary and fiscal policy that guarantee a lower bound on inflation. In contrast, policies geared toward ensuring an output lower bound are insufficient for avoiding deflationary spirals.”

  2. Scott Sumner: TheMoneyIllusion » Nick Rowe explains how to avoid reasoning from a price change: “If I was told by Nostradamus that the Fed kept the interest rate on reserves at 0.25%/year for the next 20 years, I’d certainly revise downward my inflation forecast.  But that’s because I would assume the causation runs from a lower rate of inflation to a lower policy rate.  And that’s because I assume the Fed has a model in its head where raising the policy rate is contractionary…. I had thought it was widely understood that QE has been modestly expansionary for nominal spending and inflation.  Recall that markets have responded to QE announcements by changing asset prices in a way that implied higher inflation expectations. So what is the ‘data’ that Andolfatto refers to when he says that Williamson’s post is motivated by ‘data’? It’s a simple time series graph showing that the inflation rate has been fairly low since 2009–rising after QE1, and then falling after QE3. But why would that graph have any bearing on the inflationary impact of QE? Surely you’d want to look at market responses to QE announcements, not the actual path of inflation. As far as I know everyone who seriously follows QE knows that the program is inflationary.  The only serious debate is whether it has only a tiny inflationary effect, or whether it has a modest inflationary effect. I can’t imagine anyone claiming it’s been deflationary.For God’s sake the dollar fell by 6 cents against the euro on the day QE1 was announced! Does anyone seriously think a 6 cent depreciation in the dollar is deflationary? So why develop models to explain empirical results that don’t exist? I don’t get it.”

Should Be Aware of:

  1. Karl Smith (December 2011): Bitter Medicine: “Before anything else, the banks must be saved, most likely through an open-ended lending facility like the Federal Reserve’s Term Auction Facility (TAF). They must come before taxpayers, before pensioners, before the reforms that might transform southern Europe into a dynamic player in the global economy. Not because it is fair or just or right. It is none of these things. It must happen because we have constructed a global economy that has massive international banks at its heart. Money, banking, and credit lubricate the billions of transactions that happen around the world every day. If the global financial system collapses, so will trade. Stopping that collapse will involve central banks around the world loaning enormous sums of money to their private banks at very low interest rates. It will also mean that they do this as the private banks constrict their lending to businesses and families. Cash will pile up in global banks as a war chest in case things take a turn for the worse. As with the U.S. bailout, it will seem awful and it will be awful. But it will be necessary…”

  2. Ta-Nehisi Coates: In Defense of a Loaded Word: “MY father’s name is William Paul Coates…. I have never called my father Billy. I understand, like most people, that words take on meaning within a context…. But as with so much of what we take as human, we seem to be in need of an African-American exception…. A fairly regular ritual debate over who gets to say ‘nigger’ and who does not…. ‘If you call yourself the n-word’, said the Rev. Al Sharpton, ‘you can’t get mad when someone treats you like that’. This is the politics of respectability–an attempt to raise black people to a superhuman standard. In this case it means exempting black people from a basic rule of communication–that words take on meaning from context and relationship. But as in all cases of respectability politics, what we are really saying to black people is, ‘Be less human’. This is not a fight over civil rights; it’s an attempt to raise a double standard…. To prevent enabling oppression, we demand that black people be twice as good. To prevent verifying stereotypes, we pledge to never eat a slice a watermelon in front of white people. But white racism needs no verification from black people. And a scientific poll of right-thinking humans will always conclude that watermelon is awesome…. A separate and unequal standard for black people is always wrong. And the desire to ban the word “nigger” is not anti-racism, it is finishing school. When Matt Barnes used the word “niggas” he was being inappropriate. When Richie Incognito and Riley Cooper used “nigger,” they were being violent and offensive. That we have trouble distinguishing the two evidences our discomfort with the great chasm between black and white America…”

Nick Rowe: The effect of nominal interest rates on inflation | Kathleen Geier: ≠ Inequality Matters |

Morning Must-Read: Ryan Avent on the Social Gospel and Its Critics

Ryan Avent: Economic growth: On the inevitability of justice:

The Pope… offered a lengthy statement on economic justice…. ‘Some people continue to defend trickle-down theories which assume that economic growth, encouraged by a free market, will inevitably succeed in bringing about greater justice and inclusiveness in the world…This opinion, which has never been confirmed by the facts, expresses a crude and naive trust in the goodness of those wielding economic power and in the sacra­lized workings of the prevailing economic system.’

On Saturday Greg Mankiw… weighed in…. ‘It is sad to see the pope using a pejorative, rather than encouraging an open-minded discussion of opposing perspectives.Third, as far as I know, the pope did not address the tax-exempt status of the church. I would be eager to hear his views on that issue. Maybe he thinks the tax benefits the church receives do some good when they trickle down.’

This is just the sort of response that leads non-economists to detest economists: condescending, callous, and, worst of all, intellectually lazy. It is also an example of some truly epic point-missing…. The Pope does not appear to be attacking growth. Rather, he is attacking the view that ‘economic growth, encouraged by a free market, will inevitably succeed in bringing about greater justice and inclusiveness in the world’…. Mankiw… certainly seems to be displaying precisely the viewpoint that the Pope is warning about: don’t worry about the outcomes of growth (and for heaven’s sake don’t do anything about them), because growth is pretty rad.

But let’s be clear. Historically it has taken quite a lot of hard work to ensure that economic growth does bring about greater justice and inclusiveness…. Mankiw might argue that growth enabled the generosity the led to social pressure for change…. If you want to praise growth as justice-enhancing because growth improves our moral intuition, then you also have to praise those who act on their moral intuition in an effort to create institutions that deliver greater justice. Mr Mankiw would rather be snide and complain that the Pope is name-calling…

The Short Run and the Long Run: Savings Gluts, Investment Shortfalls, too-Low Inflation Targets, Reduced Risk-Bearing Capacity, and the Failures of Our Public Sphere…: Monday Focus

And we are live over at Project Syndicate:

Back in 2007 and before I taught my students that the United States was a flexible economy. It had employers who would be willing to gamble and hire when they saw workers who would be productive without work. It had workers who would be willing to move to opportunity, or to try something new in order to get a job. And as these processes took place–as entrepreneurial workers and bosses took a chance–supply would indeed create its own demand. Adverse shocks to spending could indeed create mass unemployment and idle capacity, but their effects would be limited it to one, two, or at most three years. The way to bet, I told my students back in 2007 and before, was that the United States economy would recover roughly 40% of the ground between its current situation and its full employment potential and each year after the initial downturn had come to an end. 022 years, I said, was the domain of the Keynesian (and monetarist) short run. When analyzing events at a 3-7 year horizon, I taught, you were safe assuming a “classical” model–one in which the economy would return to full employment, and in which changes in economic policy and in the economic environment would change the distribution but not the level of spending, production, and employment. And beyond seven years was the domain of economic growth and economic institutions.

Continue reading “The Short Run and the Long Run: Savings Gluts, Investment Shortfalls, too-Low Inflation Targets, Reduced Risk-Bearing Capacity, and the Failures of Our Public Sphere…: Monday Focus”

Things to Go Watch This Week: Supporting America’s Lower-Middle-Class Families: The Hamilton Project

Supporting America’s Lower-Middle-Class Families : The Hamilton Project:

When: Wednesday, December 4, 2013 • 9:00 am – 12:00 pm

Where: The Liaison Capitol Hill Hotel

Media Inquiries: Karen Anderson • 202-797-6023 • KAnderson@brookings.edu

General Inquiries: Laura Howell • 202-797-6484 • LHowell@Brookings.edu

More than half of American families earn $60,000 or less a year — outside of poverty but with limited economic security. Indeed, many of these families rely on government programs for support and one major setback could throw their lives into chaos. On December 4th, The Hamilton Project at Brookings will host a forum to highlight two new proposals for aiding America’s lower-middle class…. Strengthen[ing] the food stamp (SNAP) program… a secondary earner tax deduction to help “make work pay” for both spouses in low income families….

The forum will conclude with a discussion between Jason Furman, Chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, and David Leonhardt, Washington Bureau Chief for the New York Times, on the challenges facing America’s lower-middle-class families.

Continue reading “Things to Go Watch This Week: Supporting America’s Lower-Middle-Class Families: The Hamilton Project”

Things You Should Read on the Morning of December 1, 2013

Must-Reads:

  1. Tony Yates: Price level targeting: “In a nice post on the New York Fed’s blog, Liberty Street Economics, Marc Giannoni and Hannah Herman write on price level targeting.  In a nutshell, they observe that, whatever the FRB said it was doing ex ante, ex post it has brought about a trend-stationary price level, which is what you would get if you were ‘price level targeting’.  The question is begged:  so why not consolidate this into a formal Price Level Target to lock in the benefits?…”

  2. Ricardo Hausmann: “It is often difficult to understand how countries that are dealt a pretty good economic hand can end up making a major mess…as if they were trying to commit suicide by jumping from the basement. Two of the most extreme cases… Argentina and Venezuela…. The puzzling thing is that this is not the first time either country has veered into an economic cul-de-sac…. It is certainly possible to describe how the road to hell is paved…. Overall inflation or some key price… come[s] under upward pressure. The government then uses its coercive power to keep a lid on price growth…. Things become really nasty when the government opts for foreign-exchange controls…. [which] give the government the sense that it can have its cake… and eat low inflation…. The dual-exchange-rate system ends up distorting production incentives… a combination of inflation and shortages… fiscal accounts worsen automatically…. Such a system can generate a self-reinforcing set of popular beliefs, which may explain why countries like Argentina and Venezuela repeatedly drive down dead-end streets. Because so many businesses make money from the rents created by the rationing of foreign exchange, rather than by creating value, it is easy to believe that markets do not work, that entrepreneurs are speculators, and that governments need to control them and impose ‘fair’ prices. All too often, this allows governments to blame the car, and even the passengers, for getting lost.”

Should-Reads:

  1. Wendy Carlin: Teaching what matters in economics: The INET CORE Project: “We missed the boat in 2008…. Nor did we later provide convincing explanations…. Some… advocated policies that contributed to the onset… exacerbated the resulting unemployment… complacency… that a largely unregulated market economy would take care of itself…. Our students are… embarrassed when they are no more able to explain the eurozone crisis or persistent unemployment than their fellow students in engineering or archaeology…. Experimental methods have shown that people are more fair-minded and moral, and less calculating than the so called Economic Man… greatly expands the set of politically viable and economically effective policies…. Improved techniques for computer modelling of complex interactions… can help design policies…. For our students, though… this is all a well-kept secret. We impose a curriculum… remote from what economists now know, and more distant still from the pressing problems…. The curriculum project… is creating open access materials for a new curriculum… history, experiments and other data sources to test competing explanations and policies. This is a great time to be an economist. It is time we made it a golden age for students of economics…”

  2. Andrés Rodríguez-Pose, Roberto Ezcurra: Government and spatial inequality: “Using regional data for 46 countries with different degrees of economic development over the period 1996-2006… there is a strong negative association between quality of government and within-country disparities. Countries with better quality of government register lower levels of spatial inequality”

  3. Matthew Yglesias (May 28, 2013): Fast and Furious economics: “It would be comforting to simply dismiss the Fast and Furious franchise as an ethically unfortunate series of movies about illegal street racing… the low-trust ethics it embodies are… typical of societies featuring a high and growing level of income inequality…. generally take economically sound risks.
    In a world where the system increasingly seems to be rigged, it’s natural to turn to the Dominic Torettos of the world as heroes. Yet Dom, for all his hard work, ingenuity, and undeniable skill doesn’t really do anything useful or productive…. He lives by a code… ultimately destructive of the social institutions needed to generate prosperity. And yet at a time when elites long ago stopped caring whether the gains of economic growth would be widely shared, and in recent years seem to have turned their backs on the unemployed altogether, then these are the heroes we’ll turn to.”

Should Be Aware of:

  1. John Holbo: Laugh if you like, but death on the tracks is funnyr: “Mirth is an emotion that may affect our moral thinking. Specifically, it makes us more utilitarian… trolley scenarios are, or may be, used as intuition pumps for utilitarian purposes. (They may be used for other things, of course.) But it is an underdiscussed fact that they may inherently do so, in part, because trolley tragedies can’t help being a bit funny…”

Duncan Black: “Every Villager pundit hitting a certain age decides that what the country really needs is mandatory military service for people younger than them” | Jo Wolff: “At its worst, philosophy is something you do against an opponent. Your job is to take the most mean-minded interpretation you can of the other person’s view and show its absurdity. And repeat until submission” | Glenn Fleishman: “The newsstand isn’t dead, but [Apple is] hiding it in a way that makes it less useful for publishers of any scale” | John Aziz: Why the post-antibiotic world is the real-life version of the zombie apocalypse | Chris Blattman: Where do warlords come from? (My favorite political economy paper of the year) | Kathleen Geier: “Last week, Michelle Goldberg wrote a smart and provocative blog post that… argues conservatives may be… abandoning the pseudo-populist brand of conservatism that, for decades, has been their mainstay, in favor of a more open elitism…” |

Chilean Politics, “Neoliberalismo”, Once-And-Future President Michelle Bachelet, “Seeing Like a State”, the Really-Existing Socialist and Neoliberal Projects of the Twentieth Century, and the Electoral Victory of Her New Majority Coalition: The Honest Broker for the Week of November 24, 2013

[Attention Conservation Notice: Harley Shaiken at the Berkeley Center for Latin American Studies asked me if I could write a short comment on a piece he was running by Javier Couso about Chilean politics, “neoliberalismo”, once-and-future President Michelle Bachelet, and the electoral victory of her New Majority Coalition–Couso being one of the co-authors of the currently highly influential El Otro Modelo: Del Orden Neoliberal al Regimen de lo Publico. The piece got out of control, and is not a success…

But if you are interested in my not-very-well-connected thoughts on Chilean politics, “neoliberalismo”, once-and-future President Michelle Bachelet, Seeing Like a *State the really-existing socialist and neoliberal projects of the twentieth century, and the electoral victory of her New Majority Coalition, they are below the fold…

Continue reading “Chilean Politics, “Neoliberalismo”, Once-And-Future President Michelle Bachelet, “Seeing Like a State”, the Really-Existing Socialist and Neoliberal Projects of the Twentieth Century, and the Electoral Victory of Her New Majority Coalition: The Honest Broker for the Week of November 24, 2013″

Things to Read at Lunchtime on November 30, 2013

Must-Reads:

  1. Evan Soltas: “U1 through U6 don’t collapse to one single measure of unemployment… [but] to… two dimensions… the narrow side and… the farther-out reaches of unemployment…. Narrower definitions of unemployment are improving more quickly than wider definitions of unemployment… labor markets are probably looser than the normal measures suggest… underemployment [is] a real, serious concern…”

  2. Jonathan Bernstein: The minimum wage and the post-policy GOP: “When both parties are healthy… popular, high-priority policy preferences of one party are bundled with the popular, high-priority policy preferences of the other. However, what exactly do Republicans have[?]… The Republican policy cupboard is pretty much empty…. It’s not clear that Republicans would accept any deal, given their paranoia about primary challenges based on accepting any kind of accommodation with the Kenyan socialist in the White House… conservatives are rejecting getting some of their priorities passed if it means accepting anything that Democrats want…. This just isn’t how the American political system is supposed to work. There really is an opportunity here for a deal that could enact popular policy ideas from both sides. But thanks to a dysfunctional Republican Party, it’s very hard to see it happening.”

Should-Reads:

  1. Francesco Saraceno: What is Mainstream Economics?: “Paul Krugman and Simon Wren-Lewis have been widely criticized… as defending ‘mainstream’ economics that spectacularly failed…. Krugman has a point, a very good one, when claiming that standard textbook analysis is (almost) all you need to understand the current crisis…. The point is what we define as ‘textbook analysis’. Krugman refers to IS-LM models. But these… disappeared from graduate curricula because supposedly too simplistic, not grounded on optimization, not intertemporal, and so on and so forth…. They were nowhere to be found during my graduate studies at Columbia (certainly not a freshwater school). None of the macro I studied in graduate school (Real Business Cycle models, or their fixed-price variant proposed by New Keynesians)… could give me insight…. The IS-LM model with minor amendments (most notably properly accounting for expectations to deal among other things with liquidity traps) remains a powerful tool to understand current phenomena. The problem is that it is not mainstream at all. What bothers me in Krugman’s post is the word ‘standard’, not ‘textbook analysis’.”

  2. Charlie Stross: Trotskyite singularitarians for Monarchism! A political speculation: “The 20th century spanned the collapse of the Monarchical System, the rise and fall of Actually Existing Socialism, a bunch of unpleasant failed experiments in pyramid building using human skulls, and the ascent to supremacy of Neoliberalism and the Washington Consensus. In 2007/08, the system malfunctioned spectacularly: it’s clearly unstable and has huge problems, but what’s going to replace it?… Neo-reactionaries… are effectively libertarians who have thrown up their hands in disgust.. and the appropriate political solution to the problem is to go back to aristocracy… Geeks for Monarchy…. We have Accelerationism… the notion that rather than halting the onslaught of capital, it is best to exacerbate its processes to bring forth its inner contradictions and thereby hasten its destruction…. Despair is a common reaction to defeat, as is Stockholm syndrome…. Libertarians… assumed [neoliberalism] would bring about the small government/small world goals…. As it becomes clear that the fruits of neoliberalism are instability and corporate parasitism rather than liberty and justice for all–is it unreasonable of them to look to an earlier, superficially simpler settlement?”

Should Be Aware of:

  1. Mark Kleiman: Against Symmetry: Republicans-love-being-lied-to Edition: “>Liberals felt sorry for Dan Rather for having used… fabricated documents in reporting on George W. Bush’s derelictions of duty…. But… no liberal blogger–let alone any liberal politician–called Rather a ‘hero’…. Contrast Mike Huckabee, who… might actually be President some day. He’s ‘shocked’ that the ‘hero journalist’ Lara Logan has been suspended from her job at CBS. It’s simply not the case that the Red Team and the Blue Team are symmetric. Yes, they both act factionally, and both camps include some lunatics. But we don’t let ours run the asylum…”

Barry Ritholtz: “No, David Rosenberg’s Bullishness Was Not ‘Purchased for $3M’: I was going to write a long point-by-point rebuttal to a Zero Hedge post about David Rosenberg that is factually erroneous, biased, defamatory and just plain wrong; instead, I will offer my correction” | Franklin Fisher: The Stability of General Equilibrium | Franklin Fisher: Disequilibrium Foundations of Equilibrium Economics | Firat Kayakiran & Thomas Biesheuvel: Zeppelins Seen Hauling Caterpillars to Mine Siberia: Commodities | Henry Blodget: Rich People Actually Don’t Create The Jobs |

Duncan Black Marvels at Charles Krauthammer

Duncan Black remembers Charles Krauthammer (2005):

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist seems intent on passing a procedural ruling to prevent judicial filibusters…. The Democrats have unilaterally shattered one of the longest-running traditions in parliamentary history worldwide. They are not to be rewarded with a deal. They must either stop or be stopped by a simple change of Senate procedure that would do nothing more than take a 200-year-old unwritten rule and make it written. What the Democrats have done is radical. What Frist is proposing is a restoration…

And Charles Krauthammer (2013):

The violence to political norms here consisted in how that change was executed. By brute force–a near party-line vote of 52 to 48. This was a disgraceful violation of more than two centuries of precedent. If a bare majority can change the fundamental rules that govern an institution, then there are no rules. Senate rules today are whatever the majority decides they are that morning…

Continue reading “Duncan Black Marvels at Charles Krauthammer”

Understanding the Stability of General Equilibrium as a Requirement for Getting a Union Card as an Economist: Friday Focus

The problem of economists not understanding what the equilibrium positions of their models mean is a serious one. So, in my mind at least, it is worth a Focus. Unfortunately, it is also a problem that is only understandable and of interest to perhaps 1/50 of the readers of this weblog. To deal with this quandary, I am making it the focus on the day after Thanksgiving, when people should be frantically reading turkey-leftover recipes, like:

Diana Rattray: Leftover Turkey Recipes: “Leftover Turkey Pie… Turkey Quiche With Peppers and Green Onions​… Turkey Empanadas… Cajun Turkey Jambalaya… Turkey Curry… Creamy Turkey With Artichokes… Turkey Divan Recipe… Hot Turkey Sandwich… Turkey and Mashed Potato Croquettes… Basic Turkey Stock… Turkey Broccoli Quiche… Creamy Turkey Pie With Biscuit Mix Topping… Turkey, Ham, and Swiss Casserole
Turkey Salad With Red Grapes… Turkey Pasta Casserole With Asparagus and Cheddar Cheese… Turkey and Rice Bake… Savory Turkey Cobbler… Curried Turkey Salad with Cranberries… Kentucky-Style Hot Brown Sandwiches… Turkey Supreme… Turkey Pie With Mushrooms… Turkey, Cheese, and Pasta Wheels… Turkey and Stuffing Bake… Turkey Casserole With Havarti Cheese
Turkey Macaroni Casserole… Turkey Rice Casserole With Curry Powder… Turkey a la King… Turkey Bake with Asparagus… Scalloped Turkey or Chicken… Hot Brown Sandwiches… Turkey Rice Bake… Cheddar Turkey and Rice Casserole… Easy Turkey Sandwich Melt… Open-Face Turkey Sandwiches with Cheese Sauce… Slow Cooker Turkey and Rice… Turkey Pot Pie… Turkey Pot Pie with Cornbread Topping… Turkey, Stuffing, and Broccoli Pie… Turkey Tetrazzini… Turkey Noodle Casserole… Turkey Croquettes… Roasted Turkey Broth… Louisville Creamed Turkey… Curried Turkey Salad… Crockpot Corn Pudding With Turkey… Turkey Divan Soup… Family Style Turkey pie… Easy Turkey & Rice Casserole IV… Turkey Enchiladas… Turkey Hash Recipe…”

And we now resume our normal programming:

I think that the solution is to make every economist pass an exam on Franklin Fisher’s “The Stability of General Equilibrium” and Disequilibrium Foundations of Equilibrium Economics. But that is just me. The problem is urgent. For example, it appears to have led Nick Rowe into a situation in which he appears to be in need of having his meds adjusted:

Nick Rowe: Why inflation will not fall off a bottomless cliff:

Continue reading “Understanding the Stability of General Equilibrium as a Requirement for Getting a Union Card as an Economist: Friday Focus”

Things to Read on the Morning of November 29, 2013

Must-Reads:

Over at the WCEG Equitablog:

Plus:

  1. Diana Rattray: Leftover Turkey Recipes: “Leftover Turkey Pie… Turkey Quiche With Peppers and Green Onions​… Turkey Empanadas… Cajun Turkey Jambalaya… Turkey Curry… Creamy Turkey With Artichokes… Turkey Divan Recipe… Hot Turkey Sandwich… Turkey and Mashed Potato Croquettes… Basic Turkey Stock… Turkey Broccoli Quiche… Creamy Turkey Pie With Biscuit Mix Topping… Turkey, Ham, and Swiss Casserole
    Turkey Salad With Red Grapes… Turkey Pasta Casserole With Asparagus and Cheddar Cheese… Turkey and Rice Bake… Savory Turkey Cobbler… Curried Turkey Salad with Cranberries… Kentucky-Style Hot Brown Sandwiches… Turkey Supreme… Turkey Pie With Mushrooms… Turkey, Cheese, and Pasta Wheels… Turkey and Stuffing Bake… Turkey Casserole With Havarti Cheese
    Turkey Macaroni Casserole… Turkey Rice Casserole With Curry Powder… Turkey a la King… Turkey Bake with Asparagus… Scalloped Turkey or Chicken… Hot Brown Sandwiches… Turkey Rice Bake… Cheddar Turkey and Rice Casserole… Easy Turkey Sandwich Melt… Open-Face Turkey Sandwiches with Cheese Sauce… Slow Cooker Turkey and Rice… Turkey Pot Pie… Turkey Pot Pie with Cornbread Topping… Turkey, Stuffing, and Broccoli Pie… Turkey Tetrazzini… Turkey Noodle Casserole… Turkey Croquettes… Roasted Turkey Broth… Louisville Creamed Turkey… Curried Turkey Salad… Crockpot Corn Pudding With Turkey… Turkey Divan Soup… Family Style Turkey pie… Easy Turkey & Rice Casserole IV… Turkey Enchiladas… Turkey Hash Recipe…”

  2. Josh Marshall: A Realist’s Take on Obamacare: “Here’s why I think the… law will be a success. Much of what I’m going to say below is based on worst case scenarios, most of which I don’t think will materialize…. I base this relative optimism on four assumptions. The first is legislative… this law will not undergo substantive changes before January 2017… Obama has complete control over this part of the equation…. This is a cardinal fact. Second and under-appreciated: the major national insurance carriers have heavily bought into the “Obamacare”/exchange model…. Third: By early next year you will have millions of new people enrolled in Medicaid, large numbers of people who have health care covered who couldn’t get it at any reasonable price before… and you will have large numbers of people who have care that is better or cheaper and often both…. It’s one thing to have millions of uninsured or people boxed out because of pre-existing conditions. But once they have affordable coverage, I don’t think you’re going to be able to take it back. Fourth… I think Obamacare is good policy…. Now, one response… goes something like this: Sure, most of the uninsured will get covered and people will preexisting will be protected and you won’t be able to be dropped if you get sick but it’s just going to be an endless PR nightmare and the Dems will be paying for it in 2014 and 2016 and maybe 2018 and it may ‘work’ but never be popular…. But here is where the question comes to the prism and the standard of success. We didn’t pass Health Care Reform for it to reap electoral gains for Democrats (though I think it still will) or to have it be popular…. The aim was to get people covered… reduce the scale of human suffering… tied to your wealth and your luck. By that standard, I think it will be a success and I think there will be no going back. And that’s the only standard that matters.”

  3. Nicole Huberfeld: Medicaid is expanding faster than you may think: “[The Supreme Court ruling that made the Medicaid expansion a state option] led to constant speculation regarding which states would exercise the ability to opt-in or opt-out of Medicaid…. Though the media have reported that only half of states are participating, of the remaining states categorized as not participating or leaning toward not participating, all but about six are actively debating and planning to expand. The future of Medicaid expansion is not nearly as bleak as the media suggests… beginning to expose an animated set of political choices at both the state and the federal level that feed a dynamic federalism story that has so far evaded the Court’s understanding. The story of the Medicaid expansion is just beginning… but the preliminary enquiry indicates strong prospects…”

Should-Reads:

Continue reading “Things to Read on the Morning of November 29, 2013”