Why Electronic Voting is a BAD Idea – Computerphile
14 Apr 2018 1 Comment
in economics of crime, politics - Australia, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA Tags: hacking, voter fraud
What North Koreans Think of America [Full] | ASIAN BOSS
13 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in defence economics, development economics, politics - USA, war and peace Tags: game theory, North Korea
Voter demographics are surprisingly stable since 1994 with one exception
13 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in gender, politics - USA Tags: voter demographics
The researchers received $800,000 in funding from the Health Research Council for this junk science
12 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in economics of information, health economics, politics - New Zealand Tags: economics of advertising, economics of obesity, nanny state
Does @amnestynz under this distinction?
11 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in defence economics, International law, laws of war, politics - New Zealand, Public Choice, war and peace Tags: civil disobedience, Gaza Strip, war against terror
Taking @ChiefSciAdvisor to the Ombudsman for playing silly buggers @sst_nz
11 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in economics of bureaucracy, economics of crime, politics - New Zealand

.
Real Time with Bill Maher: Islam and Free Speech
11 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in defence economics, economics of crime, economics of religion, law and economics, politics - USA, Public Choice, television, war and peace Tags: free speech, political correctness
More on absolutely bugger all take public transport to work outside of Wellington
11 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in politics - New Zealand, transport economics, urban economics
Liberals vs. Free Speech | Real Time with Bill Maher
11 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in economics of education, politics - USA Tags: Charles Murray, free speech, political correctness, regressive left
Union submission to Select Committee on Employment Law Amendment Bill – critique part 1: inequality
10 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, economic history, politics - New Zealand, poverty and inequality
The first part of my three-part critique of the Council of Trade Unions submission to the Parliamentary Select Committee will focus on inequality. Part 2 will be about union bargaining power. Part 3 will be about employment protection regulation.
The unions make a series of claims about trends in inequality such as on page 5 of its submission that
Since deregulation began apace in the 1980s, New Zealand has become a starkly more unequal society.
Incorrect. For the period since the middle of the 1990s, inequality in New Zealand has been stable. Brian Perry of the Ministry of Social Development in his annual review of trends in household incomes in New Zealand for 1982 to 2016 said that:
There is no evidence of any sustained rising or falling trend in BHC (before housing cost) household income inequality over the last two decades using the Gini and top 1% share measures… Incomes after deducting housing costs (AHC incomes) are more unequal than BHC incomes, as housing costs make up a higher proportion of the household budget for lower income households than they do for higher income households. AHC income inequality was also a little higher from 2011 to 2016 compared with the mid 2000s and earlier.
Veteran left-wing economist Brian Easton is equally deflating of the claims of his colleagues as to the rich getting rich and the poor getting poorer:
Those committed to the egalitarian society – which was once New Zealanders’ pride – need to ask why their concerns have so little effect. A possible explanation is that, despite the rhetoric, the rise in income inequality occurred over 20 years ago, largely as a result of Rogernomics and Ruthanasia. I know many want to believe economic inequality is still rising in New Zealand, but the careful statistical work I have done shows little change in the distribution of market incomes in the last thirty years, and the big changes in after-tax incomes were about a quarter of a century ago.
This is not to contradict the findings of Piketty and all. The evidence is that the surge in top incomes and wealth has occurred where there has been a sophisticated financial sector such as in Britain and the US. Ours is plain vanilla; the top incomes it pays contribute to overall inequality but they do not seem to have been increasing faster than average – or not enough to show in the data.
To skewer the left even further, Easton pointed out in a different article that the spike in inequality in the late 1980s in New Zealand was a statistical illusion brought on by the introduction of dividend imputation in the company tax system.
Thus, the taxpayer’s recorded income went up even though there was no actual change in their market income. To get consistency over time the estimates treat the grossing-up of these dividends as the substantial tax break that it was, rather than an increase in market income; that is, the imputation income is omitted. Alvaredo et al. do not make this adjustment, which results in their series showing an artificial increase in income share in the late 1990s from a change in measurement, rather than from any fundamental change.
Brian Easton adjusted the top income share database put together by Piketty and others for New Zealand for the introduction of dividend imputation. This encouraged companies to distribute more dividends.

Once this measurement error was corrected by Easton, there has been no increase in top income shares in New Zealand since the 1950s. It has been a slow taper at best or a flat line.
The rest of the discussion by the unions of the harmful effects of rising inequality are therefore based on a false premise. Inequality is not rising in New Zealand, so it therefore cannot have any of the harmful effects that follow from the rise in inequality is listed by the unions.
Focusing in on a mid-1990s is never a good for the unions because following the passage of the Employment Contracts Act, there was a wages boom after 20 years stagnation.
To make things worse for the pessimism of the union movement, that wage growth was broadly spread with rising incomes among both Maori and Pacifica.

The unions fall at the first hurdle. Their claim that inequality is rising in New Zealand is simply not supported by the facts. Indeed, if inequality is rising, why is real adjusted for household size medium household incomes rising from Maori and Pacifica at a faster rate than for Europeans; a 70% rise versus a 50% rise since 1993.

The unions do have the cheek of referring to after household housing costs inequality such as in the screen snapshot above from their submission. But as they make no suggestions on how to fix it, their concerns are of no use. After all, that would require them to advocate less regulation of land supply which is anathema to their socialist leanings. Indeed, unions want to make things worse for the low waged and beneficiaries by advocating rent controls and other regulations that make investment in rental properties less attractive.
Still more on bugger all take buses and trains to work
10 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in economic history, politics - New Zealand, transport economics
Saving Kids From Government Schools
10 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in comparative institutional analysis, economics of bureaucracy, economics of education, human capital, labour economics, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA, Public Choice Tags: charter schools, School choice
More on bugger all people take public transport
09 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in economic history, politics - New Zealand, transport economics
My prison numbers Herald op-ed is up.
09 Apr 2018 2 Comments
in applied price theory, economics of crime, labour economics, law and economics, occupational choice, politics - New Zealand Tags: crime and punishment, criminal deterrence, law and order
Jonathan Chait is spot on. Left believes they lose because the system is rigged and voters are duped. It is never that their ideas just don’t fly.
09 Apr 2018 Leave a comment
in constitutional political economy, income redistribution, politics - USA, Public Choice, rentseeking Tags: free speech, media bias, preference falsification, preference formation, regressive left





Recent Comments