Current state of knowledge on the Trump tax cuts

That is the topic of my latest Bloomberg column.  Here is one summary excerpt: One result: Total tangible corporate investment went up by about 11%. That has been a welcome shot in the arm for an economy that was by some measures suffering from an investment drought. The strong state of the Biden economy may, in…

Current state of knowledge on the Trump tax cuts

The employment effects of a guaranteed income

By Eva Vivalt, Elizabeth Rhodes, Alexander W. Bartik, David E. Broockman, Sarah Miller, Here is the link, but I am still sleeping.  Here is the abstract: We study the causal impacts of income on a rich array of employment outcomes, leveraging an experiment in which 1,000 low-income individuals were randomized into receiving $1,000 per month […]

The employment effects of a guaranteed income

Will France Opt for Bernie Sanders-Style Taxation?

Some folks on the left have a deep-seated resentment of successful investors, entrepreneurs, business owners, and other high-income people. They want to hit them with confiscatory tax rates, even if the tax is so punitive that the government doesn’t wind up with more revenue. Heck, some of them are so consumed by hate and envy […]

Will France Opt for Bernie Sanders-Style Taxation?

Flooding Housing Policy

The Minister of Housing’s ambition is to reduce markedly the ratio of house prices to household incomes. If his strategy works it would transform the housing market, dramatically changing the prospects of housing as an investment. Brian Easton writes –  Leaving aside the Minister’s metaphor of ‘flooding the market’ I do not see how the […]

Flooding Housing Policy

Right to Repair

The Green Party has a Member’s Bill up arguing for a consumer right of repair; Auckland University’s Alex Sims has written a few columns in support of such a thing. I’d had an email asking about that legislation; figured I’d share my response here – tidied up a bit.If it’s more expensive to produce a product…

Right to Repair

BBB in the NYT

I pitch Build, Baby, Build in today’s New York Times. No illustrations, but a bunch of cool graphs cooked up by Sara Chodosh of the NYT data analytics team. The original title was “The Panacea Policy,” but now it’s “Yes in My Backyard: The Case For Housing Deregulation.” And for you, dear readers, it’s ungated!…

BBB in the NYT

Biden’s Desperate Vote-Buying Proposal for Nationwide Rent Control

I’m not a political pundit, but I’m guessing that yesterday’s despicable assassination attempt on Donald Trump increases the likelihood that he reclaims the White House. That’s probably not good news for trade policy (though Biden has been just as bad), but it will be very good news for housing policy. Not because of what Trump […]

Biden’s Desperate Vote-Buying Proposal for Nationwide Rent Control

Market Preserving Federalism in the USA

One of my favorite economic journal articles is by Barry Weingast and has the short title “Market Preserving Federalism” (MPF). In this paper, Weingast lays out the conditions necessary for two tenuous equilibria: A) Federalism  & B) Federalism that preserves a market economy.  Given that we just celebrated Independence Day in the USA, it seems […]

Market Preserving Federalism in the USA

DON BRASH: ANOTHER OUTSTANDING SPEECH FROM CHRIS BISHOP

Four months ago, I described a speech by Chris Bishop in his capacity as Minister of Housing as perhaps the most important speech given by any Government minister since the election last year.   He’s just given another, arguably even more important, laying out in words of one syllable what the Government plans to do…

DON BRASH: ANOTHER OUTSTANDING SPEECH FROM CHRIS BISHOP

Bryan Caplan on YIMBY in the NYT

Here is one excerpt: What few appreciate is that the overregulation of housing has blocked a classic American path: moving to a higher-wage part of the country to secure a better life. A paper by the economists Peter Ganong and Daniel Shoag shows that housing costs now routinely outweigh wage gains: While janitors and waiters do indeed […]

Bryan Caplan on YIMBY in the NYT

Zoning Matters for Rising Housing Costs, Especially After 1980

From a new working paper “The Price of Housing in the United States, 1890-2006” by Ronan C. Lyons, Allison Shertzer, Rowena Gray & David N. Agorastos (emphasis added): “Zoning was adopted by almost every city in our sample during the 1920s. We see a slightly steeper gradient over the next two periods (coefficients of .48 […]

Zoning Matters for Rising Housing Costs, Especially After 1980

The Pharmac Fiasco

If you don’t understand how things work you make foolish mistakes. To explain how the government got into its cancer drugs muddle, we need to explain first how New Zealand’s pharmaceutical purchasing system works. There is a parallel between Pharmac and the Reserve Bank of New Zealand. The Government sets the monetary policy framework with […]

The Pharmac Fiasco

Pharmac’s free ride won’t last forever

Americans contribute disproportionately toward the pharmaceutical innovation from which we all benefit, but their tolerance for subsidising the rest of the world is on the wane…   Eric Crampton writes If philosophy students remember one thing from their lectures on Immanuel Kant in undergraduate classes, it is his categorical imperative. It’s easy to remember […]

Pharmac’s free ride won’t last forever

On degrowth

Five Questions Congress Should’ve Asked the Climate Cartel

SG investing promises nebulous profits in some far-off future, but my friends and family whose retirements rely on CalPERS need it to perform better today instead of doubling down on its money-losing ways.

Five Questions Congress Should’ve Asked the Climate Cartel

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