
Idiosyncratic Whisk: Teen Employment and the Minimum Wage, 60 years of experience
27 Sep 2014 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, labour economics, minimum wage, unemployment Tags: minimum wage

Is there any other issue where the data conforms so strongly to basic economic intuition, and yet is widely written off as a coincidence?
via Idiosyncratic Whisk: Teen Employment and the Minimum Wage, 60 years of experience.
Climate Consensus: Do Little for Now
16 Sep 2014 1 Comment
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, economics of natural disasters, environmental economics, global warming, health economics, liberalism, technological progress Tags: climate alarmism, cost benefit analysis, global warming, moral panic, richer is safer, wealthier is healthier













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