Blog Archives

Small families are good for economic development.

According to the Economist magazine: In the 1980s, population was regarded as relatively unimportant to economic performance. American delegates told a UN conference in 1984 that “population growth is, in and of itself, neither good nor bad; it is a

Posted in Development

Shocking ignorance at the St. Louis Fed

Yi Wen, the Assistant Vice President of the St. Louis Fed and his Research Associate, Maria A. Arias wrote an article which blamed the great recession of 2008 on, “the private sector’s dramatic increase in their willingness to hoard money instead of spend

Posted in Macro

Money, Brahmagupta, and the big bang.

Considering how important and obvious zero is to educated people today, zero is a surprisingly difficult concept.  Most children under the age of five cannot grasp it at all and it was unknown for most of human history.  The Romans

Posted in Macro

There’s gold in them thar standards!

Note: This post is 3460 words–about a fourteen minute read. Several presidential candidates have been in favor of the gold standard including Ron Paul in 2012 and Rand Paul and Ted Cruz in 2015.   In response, Megan McArdle, explained why

Posted in Macro

Entrepreneurialism is overrated.

What inputs are required for the production of goods and services?  All modern economics textbooks agree that labor and capital are fundamental factors of production.  Some textbooks also include land which is usually a shorthand for all natural resources including

Posted in Development, Managerial Micro

How Americans sabotage welfare programs

Joseph Stromberg wrote an explainer about why the US has worse public transit than any other rich nation in the world despite providing greater subsidies per rider.  It isn’t just because the US is more spread-out or more enthusiastic about

Posted in Discrimination

Are the Democrats poised to crush Republicans or will Republicans continue crushing Democrats?

Kevin Drum argues that demographic trends and political priorities are both conspiring to doom the Republican party to electoral defeat and that this helps explain the disarray of the Republican presidential campaigns so far.  To the contrary, Matt Yglesias argues that

Posted in Public Finance

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