Author: Asymptosis
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Exports Ended the Great Depression: Yeah, Right
A commenter tagged arogersb replied to one of my comments on Bruce Bartlett’s Forbes article (see my previous post), reiterating a familiar canard: True, the US recovered after WWII. But the reason of that recovery was not debt, it’s that the rest of the world factories were destroyed and had to import from the US.…
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Reagan Supply Sider on The New Deal: “Deficits were too small, not too large.”
Forget “centrism.” How about “sensible-ism”? Bruce Bartlett displays it in spades in his new Forbes article. Just as he did–to some extent–in his book Impostor: How George W. Bush Bankrupted America and Betrayed the Reagan Legacy. Bartlett also wrote Reaganomics: Supply-Side Economics in Action–which is decidedly admiring of that belief system–so you know where he’s…
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“Branding Happens”
My ex business partner Steve has a new post asking why anybody uses glossy branding ads, when direct marketing is so much more cost-effective, and builds brand at the same time. The weird thing about us was that we cared about conversion (vs “brandingâ€) , and despite dozens of attempts to make ads pay, the…
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Education Needed?
The #9 search term on ask.com for the week ending January 29th: “How to get pregnant” This is pretty funny at first blush. But it’s curious at second. Google Trends shows searches for this prase nearly tripling from June to December, 2008. Do tough economic times make it harder to conceive? Interestingly, the United Arab…
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(Paul) Romer: Start New Banks?
Paul Romer, husband and co-author to CEA head Christy Romer, has a suggestion that on the surface makes all kinds of sense. Paul Romer Says Starting New Banks Would Keep TARP Money Away From Bad Banks – WSJ.com. Everyone agrees that the United States urgently needs a few good banks. Turning bad banks into good…
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Women Rule! So Why Do They Tart Themselves Up?
I've always wondered: why do women go in for elaborate clothing, makeup, and all those other things that (along with certain innate characteristics) make them so alluring to us males, while men dress relatively drably? It's not universal, of course, but it's the rule throughout much of the world. Among pre-agricultural peoples, primates, almost every…
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Tyler Cowen: $10 Trillion in Stimulus Would Have No Effect
I heard him on an NPR show last night, and was pulling my hair out with frustration. I admit that was partly because of comments by Cato’s Chris Edwards, who acts as if Keynesians don’t believe in monetary policy, calling them “childish.” When in fact it’s fundamentalist monetarists (read: supply-siders) who refuse to believe in…
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Demilitarize U.S. Foreign Policy: Mullen Agrees with Gates (and Me)
AFP: US forces chief urges less military use in foreign policy. The top US military officer cautioned against ever growing militarization of US foreign policy, urging greater support for civilian approaches to the world’s problems. … “We must be just as bold in providing options when they don’t involve our participation or our leadership, or,…
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We Need to Spur Business Investment. Yeah, Right.
Comes before the court: Floyd Norris to point out that the heady dividends delivered by corporations 2004-2008 were in many cases not profits, but recycled loans. They borrowed the money, then paid it out to shareholders. Every penny in profits ($2.4 trillion) went out in dividends ($.9 trillion) and stock buybacks ($1.7 trillion), plus another…
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The Massive Missing Link in GDP: Home-Work
I’ve spilled a lot of electronic ink over the last few years arguing about what causes GDP growth (especially in developed countries like the U.S.), tacitly accepting that GDP per capita was a reasonably good proxy for prosperity and well-being. And it is–reasonably. It has the advantage of being widely and fairly consistently measured throughout…
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Depression Lessons: How Much Fiscal Stimulus?
There's lots of talk these days on upcoming fiscal stimulus–how much it should be and how it should be delivered. The NYT Economix blog offers recommendations from several economists, assuming a $500-billion package. Here's one that Greg Mankiw likes. When it comes to the size of the stimulus–and as Krugman argues quite cogently, in this…
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Medicare: Government Does It Right
I recently had occasion to go through two years of my 84-year-old mom's medical and insurance statements, to be sure that everything was kosher and that insurers were, in fact, paying all the bills they were supposed to be paying. You've undoubtedly attempted similar, so you can imagine that it was a daunting task–trying to…
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Mankiw (Mis) Channels Romer
In the grand conservative tradition of cherry-picking convenient quotations, Greg Mankiw pulls one from Christina and David Romer’s paper, “The Macroeconomic Effects of Tax Changes” (PDF). Tax changes have very large effects on output. Our baseline specification suggests that an exogenous tax increase of one percent of GDP lowers real GDP by roughly three percent.…
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Investing: Government Knows Better
I know: that headline is hate speech. But the fact is that it’s sometimes true. Take education. Here’s the kind of reliable payoffs we get from investing there: And this doesn’t even count the long-term aid to business that education spending provides. Remember: few businesses are seriously constrained by a lack of investment capital (only…
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Tyler Cowen Ignores the Elephant
Tyler Cowen’s Sunday NYT discussion of The New Deal is getting all sorts of play in the econoblogosphere–pro and con. What’s not getting much discussion (except here) is the elephant that Tyler rather inexplicably fails to even mention: massive government (deficit) spending during the war. (It’s not the war, stupid, it’s the spending.) The consensus…
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Do Wealthy Investors Create Growth and Prosperity? Not So Much
Here’s the central tenet of supply-side/trickle-down/voodoo Reaganomics: If rich people get (and keep) more money, they will invest it and promote economic growth, so everyone will prosper. That would (perhaps) be true if a shortage of investment were an important constraint on businesses and on economic growth. But according to the people who run those…
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Obama Deploys Radical Linguistic Coherence Strategy
I don't usually offer up whole posts from others, but Andy Borowitz pones this one. I can't improve on it. Obama’s Use of Complete Sentences Stirs ControversyStunning Break with Last Eight Years In the first two weeks since the election, President-elect Barack Obama has broken with a tradition established over the past eight years through…
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Who Says “Soft Power” Doesn’t Matter?
World leaders won't even shake Bush's hand: Related posts: “Cheering Germans Will Not Send More Troops to Afghanistan” Weimar, Zimbabwe, Here We Come Economies Need a Gardener’s Invisible Hand Joe Thinks Obama’s an Appeaser, and FDR Caused The Great Depression McCain’s Steel Ceiling: Who Loves Ya, Baby?