Paris under the Swastika – Collaboration and Resistance – On the Homefro…
04 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, laws of war, war and peace Tags: France, World War II
Checking out Carmel Sepuloni’s campaign claims
04 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
Radio NZ reports that Minister for Social Development Carmel Sepuloni was on the campaign trail in Christchurch yesterday defending her government’s performance. She said that: “Her government had seen higher numbers of beneficiaries moving into jobs …” Yet the numbers on a Jobseeker benefit continue to climb. Technically her assertion may be true but it’s…
Checking out Carmel Sepuloni’s campaign claims
Fighting ideological repression by the Authoritarian Left
04 Oct 2023 Leave a comment

I don’t know how Anna Krylov manages to sustain a successful career as an accomplished and honored theoretical and quantum chemist at the University of Southern California—while at the same time turning out long and thoughtful pieces that attack the ruination of science by the Authoritarian Left. She was, for example, the main author of […]
Fighting ideological repression by the Authoritarian Left
Why Sweden Isn’t an Example of Socialism
04 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
in economic growth, economic history, economics of regulation, history of economic thought, industrial organisation, labour economics, macroeconomics, welfare reform Tags: Sweden
When I meet Americans who self-identify as “socialists,” it is quite uncommon for them to advocate the abolition of private property and the “collective or governmental ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods”–which is the dictionary definition of socialism. Instead most of the American “socialists” I meet favor a more…
Why Sweden Isn’t an Example of Socialism
Certified
04 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
If a drug or medical device has already gone through the regulatory gauntlet at the FDA and Australia, or in the UK and Canada, or the EU and Taiwan, or Switzerland and Singapore, does it seem all that likely that Medsafe’s going to find anything that everyone else missed?Sure, Medsafe has ‘expedited’ processes for drugs…
Certified
Some charts on our underperforming economy
04 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
in economic growth, macroeconomics

It is election season, and since the performance of the economy enables (or disables) so much of what political parties want to do, or to spend, it is worth having a look at a few charts. There have been plenty on inflation this year, and plenty of fiscal policy in just the last few weeks. […]
Some charts on our underperforming economy
NSF invests millions in indigenous knowledge
04 Oct 2023 Leave a comment

It is of course precarious to criticize the present-day worship of “indigenous knowledge”, as it’s all too easy to dismiss that criticism as racism or bigotry. The problem is not that the empirical knowledge of indigenous people is worthless, because it isn’t. Although it’s often derived from trial and error, that is still a way […]
NSF invests millions in indigenous knowledge
Some Links
03 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
TweetErec Smith talks with C-SPAN about his new book, A Critique of Anti-Racism in Rhetoric and Composition. Ken Langone’s letter in today’s Wall Street Journal is worth reading: A hearty second to Ira Stoll (“ProPublica Buries Its Clarence Thomas News,” op-ed, Sept. 23). The closer you look at the left’s latest attacks on Justice Clarence Thomas…
Some Links
Quotation of the Day…
03 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
Tweet… is from page 454 of my late Nobel-laureate colleague Jim Buchanan‘s 1989 paper “The Relatively Absolute Absolutes,” as this article is reprinted in volume 1 (1999) of The Collected Works of James M. Buchanan: The Logical Foundations of Constitutional Liberty: I consider it to be the task of economists, as economic scientists, to make…
Quotation of the Day…
How to Wreck Reliable & Affordable Power Supplies: Keep Adding Wind & Solar
03 Oct 2023 Leave a comment

Without exception, every country that’s plugged into the grand wind and solar ‘transition’ is suffering from crippling power prices and unreliable delivery. The relationship is so stark as to be blindingly obvious; and one that was as perfectly predictable, as it was perfectly avoidable. Paying wind and solar operators seemingly endless and practically countless $billions […]
How to Wreck Reliable & Affordable Power Supplies: Keep Adding Wind & Solar
How to Wreck Reliable & Affordable Power Supplies: Keep Adding Wind & Solar
03 Oct 2023 Leave a comment

Without exception, every country that’s plugged into the grand wind and solar ‘transition’ is suffering from crippling power prices and unreliable delivery. The relationship is so stark as to be blindingly obvious; and one that was as perfectly predictable, as it was perfectly avoidable. Paying wind and solar operators seemingly endless and practically countless $billions […]
How to Wreck Reliable & Affordable Power Supplies: Keep Adding Wind & Solar
A late pitch for supermarket competition
03 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
Labour says they want more competition in grocery retail. I worry about the cursed monkey paw version of it.Here’s what they say:“We know that it’s tough right now for many people, and the high cost of food isn’t helping,” Commerce and Consumer Affairs spokesperson Duncan Webb said.“The inquiry we ordered into competition in the grocery…
A late pitch for supermarket competition
ELIZABETH RATA: Two Treaties of Waitangi – the Articles Treaty and the Principles Treaty
03 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
Elizabeth Rate writes – There are two versions of the Treaty of Waitangi. The first is the 1840 Treaty – the ‘Articles Treaty’. The second is what I call the ‘Principles Treaty’. It dates from 1986 when the principles were first included in legislation. Astonishingly, the parliamentary representatives who inserted the word ‘principles’ did not […]
ELIZABETH RATA: Two Treaties of Waitangi – the Articles Treaty and the Principles Treaty
Inflation, Deflation and Debt
03 Oct 2023 Leave a comment
in budget deficits, economic history, financial economics, fiscal policy, history of economic thought, macroeconomics, monetary economics
Economics Lessons from the Kibbutzim
02 Oct 2023 Leave a comment

In March 2023, I visited Ma’agan Michael Kibbutz and had a meeting with a former Israeli government official charged with managing the government bailout of about 200 kibbutzim. Both offered empirical lessons about the challenges of communal living. Background and Description Ma’agan Michael was one of the few kibbutzim not bailed out. It is…
Economics Lessons from the Kibbutzim
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