Top 5 Useless Megaprojects
16 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
in economic history, economics of media and culture
Daily Delivery Fails: Why Weather-Dependent Wind Power Will Always Be Utterly Pointless
15 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
Electricity that can’t be delivered as and when households and businesses need it, has absolutely no commercial value. Hence the massive and endless subsidies to chaotically intermittent wind and solar and the punitive mandates that force retailers to take it, ahead of the reliable and affordable stuff.
Random 3,000 to 4,000 MW wind power output collapses are at the heart of Australia’s self-inflicted renewable energy debacle. The consequences of an obsession with subsidised wind and solar were as perfectly predictable, as they were perfectly avoidable. Power rationing is now routine and power prices are soaring out of control.
What’s depicted above – courtesy of Aneroid Energy – is the output delivered by Australian wind power outfits to the Eastern Grid during May, when there were more than a half-dozen occasions when total output amounted to less than 1,000 MW (or 11.6% of total capacity) and three occasions when output…
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The interaction of inflation with the tax code and the business cycle
15 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
in business cycles, macroeconomics, monetary economics, public economics
Southern polytech gears up for tutoring more students by translating automotive engineering material into te reo
15 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
The polytechnic sector has been getting a bad press in recent times.
Former Otago Polytechnic chief executive Phil Ker has demanded an apology from Education Minister Chris Hipkins for turning the country’s polytechnic education system into “a national disgrace”.
The Otago Daily Times has described the centralising of New Zealand’s 16 polytechnics into one grand organisation, Te Pukenga, as a “shambles”.
National’s Tertiary Education spokesperson and Invercargill MP Penny Simmonds says polytechnics in the South are being forced to cut millions from their budgets because the Government’s mega-merger polytechnic entity Te Pūkenga is in such a mess,
Among the more disturbing reports, new data shows one-third of first year polytechnic students quit their studies last year and some qualifications were unable to retain any learners at all.
Across the country, 12,642 equivalent full-time students began courses at polytechnics last year, but 4124 – or 32.6% – dropped out , according…
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Robert Kee: Ireland – A Television History – Part 10 of 13 – ‘Civil War 1921-1923’
15 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
Robert Kee (1919-2013) was already a veteran British broadcaster, writer, historian and journalist when his 1980 thirteen part series ‘Ireland: A Television History’ was first broadcast in Ireland and Britain.
The series was highly acclaimed as Kee followed Ireland’s complex history through the island’s development from pre-Christian times, to various uprisings down the centuries, explains the famine of 1845, the 1916 Rising, Independence and up to the late 1970s, with a specific emphasis on the creation of the modern independent republic and the roots of the Troubles. More importantly, the series presented many British viewers with their first detailed insight into the history of Irish politics, especially the issues surrounding sovereignty and identity in Northern Ireland. It could also be argued that the series did much the same for many Irish viewers too.
The series proved unexpectedly timely, since its broadcast coincided with increased tensions in Northern Ireland…
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Monetary Aggregates and Output
15 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
in business cycles, macroeconomics, monetarism, monetary economics
Reducing Space Waste Before, During, and After
15 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
in economics of media and culture
Scott Freeman, Espen R. Henriksen, and Finn E. Kydland
14 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
in applied welfare economics, business cycles, macroeconomics, monetary economics
Net-Zero Targets Obsession Guaranteed to Destroy Reliable & Affordable Power Supplies
14 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
The failure to advance nuclear power in this country to replace coal-fired plants being driven out of business by massive subsidies to wind and solar beggars belief. Everyone with half a brain is alive to the fact that chaotically intermittent and heavily subsidised wind and solar are responsible for Australia’s power pricing and supply calamity
Australian households and businesses are already feeling the pinch; retail power prices have rocketed, with much worse to come; energy hungry businesses are simply cut from the grid when the sun sets and special calm weather sets in.
And yet, Labor’s gormless Energy Minister, Chris Bowen pretends that the panacea to the renewables-driven disaster is more of the same. George Orwell would struggle to keep a straight face laying out the kind of political narrative being run by Bowen and his fellow travellers.
Nick Cater spells out a little of what Australians can look forward to under the Green-Labor Alliance.
Net-zero target an unaffordable risk
The Australian
Nick Cater
11 August 2022
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Mitchell’s Law and Insulin Prices
14 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
The central message of “Mitchell’s law” is certainly not something I concocted.
Economists and other policy experts have known for a couple of hundred years that politicians have a tendency to makes mistakes
and then use the resulting damage as a justification for even more intervention.
I simply gave this phenomenon a name so I didn’t have to offer repeat explanations.
Over and over and over and over again.
Today we’re going to look at another example of politicians demanding more intervention to address a problem caused by previous interventions.
In an article for National Review, Michael Cannon has a very depressing explanation of how government has messed up the market for insulin.
…a proposal by congressional Democrats to mandate that private insurance companies cap out-of-pocket spending on insulin…neglects to address the way the government drives up the cost of insulin. Further intervention would make matters worse…
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Free download: If wages fell during a recession
14 Aug 2022 Leave a comment
You can download my full paper “If Wages Fell During a Recession” with Dan Houser from the Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization (only free until September 24, 2022).
There is a simulated recession in our experiment. We ask what happens if employers cut wages in response. Although nominal wage cuts are rare in the outside world, some of our lab subjects cut the wages of their “employee”. Employees retaliated against nominal wage cuts by shirking, such that the employers probably would have been better off keeping wages rigid.
We also tried the same thing with an inflation shock that allowed the employer to institute a real wage cut without a nominal wage cut. The reaction to that real wage cut was muted compared to the retaliation against the obvious nominal wage cut.

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