Things to Read on the Morning of November 9, 2014

Must- and Shall-Reads:

 

  1. Neil Siegel: Halbig, King, and the Limits of Reasonable Legal Disagreement: In the debates over the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act… I did not dismiss the arguments of those who disagreed with me. There often has been reasonable, irreconcilable disagreement over the meaning of the Constitution…. Halbig and King… are different. I can accept… that the relevant provisions of the ACA are ambiguous. What I cannot accept as reasonable or responsible… is the argument… that the ACA Congress clearly and unambiguously accomplished what no Member of Congress, no one in the Congressional Budget Office, none of the four dissenting Justices in NFIB v. Sebelius, and no state official realized that Congress had accomplished when it passed the ACA: self-destructively limit the tax subsidies that make health insurance affordable for millions of Americans to those who have the good fortune of happening to reside in states that set up their own health insurance exchanges…. Some may conclude that I am not as tolerant of reasonable legal disagreement as I think I am or used to be. Others may conclude that I care too much about the draconian financial consequences for millions of Americans and insurance companies if this litigation succeeds. I have considered these possibilities, and I have rejected them. The plaintiffs’ case is so weak and transparently political that it is dismaying to see it be taken seriously.

  2. Nicholas Bagley: : The Supreme Court will hear King. That’s bad news for the ACA: “In a significant setback for the Obama administration, the Supreme Court just agreed to review King v. Burwell, the Fourth Circuit’s decision upholding an IRS rule extending tax credits to federally established exchanges…. At least four justices… voted to take the case… The justices’ votes on whether to grant the case are decent proxies for how they’ll decide the case. The justices who agree with King wouldn’t vote to grant…. The justices who disagree with King… there are at least four such justices…. That means that either Chief Justice Roberts or Justice Kennedy will again hold the key vote. None of this bodes well for the government. That’s not to say the government can’t win. It might. As I’ve said many times, the statutory arguments cut in its favor. But the Court’s decision to grant King substantially increases the odds that the government will lose this case. The states that refused to set up their own exchange need to start thinking—now—about what to do if the Court releases a decision in June 2015 withdrawing tax credits from their citizens.”

  3. Ricardo Hausmann: The Economics of Inclusion: “I believe that both inequality and slow growth often result from a particular form of exclusion….Thanks to more than two centuries of sustained growth, average per capita income in the OECD countries is just under $40,000–3.3, 11.3, and 17.7 times more than in Latin America, South Asia, and Sub-Saharan Africa, respectively. Sustained growth has obviously not included the majority of humanity…. GDP per worker in… Nuevo León in Mexico is eight times that of Guerrero…. Why would capitalists extract so little value from workers if they could get so much more out of them?…To form part of the modern economy, firms and households need access to networks…. But connecting to these networks involves fixed costs….It is the fixed costs that limit the diffusion of the networks. So, a strategy for inclusive growth has to focus on ways of either lowering or paying for the fixed costs that connect people to networks. Technology can help…. But in other areas, the issue involves public policy…. A strategy for inclusive growth must empower people by including them in the networks that make them productive. Inclusiveness should not be seen as a restriction on growth to make it morally palatable. Viewed properly, inclusiveness is actually a strategy that enhances growth.

  4. Ryan Avent: Forget the 1%: “It is the 0.01% who are really getting ahead in America…. Saez and… Zucman… uses a richer variety of sources…. The share of wealth held by the bottom 90% is an effective measure of ‘middle class’ wealth…. In the late 1920s the bottom 90% held just 16% of America’s wealth—-considerably less than that held by the top 0.1%, which controlled a quarter of total wealth just before the crash of 1929…. By the early 1980s the share of household wealth held by the middle class rose to 36%—roughly four times the share controlled by the top 0.1%…. From the early 1980s… these trends have reversed…. The 16,000 families making up the richest 0.01%, with an average net worth of $371m, now control 11.2% of total wealth—-back to the 1916 share, which is the highest on record…. The top 0.1%… hold 22% of America’s wealth…. The outsize fortunes of the few would not be too worrying were they largely the product of entrepreneurial activity…. The club of young rich includes not only Mark Zuckerbergs, the authors argue, but also Paris Hiltons…. The share of labour income earned by the top 0.1% appears to have peaked… held in the form of shares… levelled off… held in bonds has risen… hint[ing] that America’s biggest fortunes may be starting to have less to do with building businesses…”

  5. Jessie Handbury and David E. Weinstein: Are Big Cities Expensive?: “Most of the variation in prices across cities can be attributed to flaws in the conventional indexes… compar[ing] prices of similar but not identical goods… not adjust[ing] for the availability of goods…. Big cities like New York are typically reported to have a cost of living more than double that of small cities like Des Moines, Iowa with nominal wages that are only 40% higher on average. Why then isn’t there a massive exodus from large cities into small ones? A common explanation is that larger cities offer better amenities (Glaeser and Kerr 2008)….We suggest a much simpler explanation…. We study the prices of barcoded grocery items sold across cities in the US and find that almost all of the variation in prices across cities can be attributed to flaws in the data used to make spatial price comparisons…”

  6. Nick Rowe: Black holes and Neo-Fisherites are a monetary phenomenon: “Suppose… the central bank sets a nominal rate of interest…. Nominal demand for goods can spiral down to zero, if people expect it to…. Nominal demand for goods can spiral up to infinity, if people expect it to…. But what is happening to the nominal stock of base money if the economy sprials down into a black hole? And what is happening to the nominal stock of base money if the economy spirals up into a white explosion? Neo-Wicksellian models are silent…. If it lets the stock of base money spiral down to zero… then of course the economy would spiral down into a black hole. But… central banks did not in fact do this…. We need to introduce money explicitly if we want to understand what happens…. Take a related question–the Neo-Fisherite question. If the central bank permanently raises the nominal interest rate, will this result in higher or lower inflation? If you tell me what permanently raising the nominal interest rate does to the base money supply growth rate, I can answer your question…. The Neo-Wicksellian perspective… is what leads us to ask… badly-posed questions…”

Should Be Aware of:

 

  1. Rich Yeselson: Six Points on the Midterm Elections: “Many voters don’t understand the structures and details of politics… don’t understand… separation of powers in an age of parliamentary[-discipline] parties…. More than 40% of them… don’t even know… which party controls… Congress…. Older people do not want some libertarian desert, and certainly do want to keep their welfare gerontocracy…. Voters were moderately liberal not only on the minimum wage, but also climate change and path to citizenship for illegal immigrants…. It’s not the 1930s anymore–white people in Kentucky, Louisiana, and Arkansas despise anything that reminds them of the national Democratic party, which they already think is socialist as it is. They don’t want it to move left, they think it’s grotesquely left enough as it is…. Government is not assumed to be the vehicle for the collective aspirations of the American people, but, rather, a highly problematic institution (which it is!)…. A centrist Democrat, Mary Burke, lost by a solid 7% to a union slayer, Scott Walker, and Walker took 34% of the union household vote…. We don’t even know what will ‘work’ in a place like Wisconsin. Good policy should be promoted, and maybe it will lead to good politics. But most of the country doesn’t want to move to the left…. Perhaps… the entire New Deal era was itself a historical anomaly, which temporarily masked the deep American divisions over race and religion, and suppressed for a time a fetish of individuation at the usual expense of social solidarity…”

November 9, 2014

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