The Labor Party thinks the Danish labour market is something of a model for New Zealand despite its inferior performance on unemployment.
Data extracted on 17 Jan 2016 03:44 UTC (GMT) from OECD.Stat.
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17 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in economic history, labour economics, labour supply, politics - New Zealand, unemployment Tags: Denmark, employment law, labour market deregulation
The Labor Party thinks the Danish labour market is something of a model for New Zealand despite its inferior performance on unemployment.
Data extracted on 17 Jan 2016 03:44 UTC (GMT) from OECD.Stat.
17 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, politics - USA, Public Choice

17 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in labour economics, labour supply, minimum wage, politics - New Zealand, unemployment Tags: Denmark, employment law, equilibrium unemployment rate, labour market deregulation
https://twitter.com/KiwiLiveNews/status/688503382181449728
The Labour Party wants the New Zealand labour market to be more like that in Denmark. The early 1990s recession New Zealand aside, New Zealand has always had a lower equilibrium unemployment rate than Denmark.
Data extracted on 17 Jan 2016 03:29 UTC (GMT) from OECD.Stat.
17 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in economic history, gender, labour economics, labour supply, politics - USA, welfare reform Tags: child poverty, family poverty, single mothers, single parents, US welfare reforms
16 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in financial economics, politics - USA, Public Choice Tags: 2016 presidential election, prediction markets
16 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in constitutional political economy, politics - USA
16 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in politics - USA, war and peace Tags: Cold War, game theory, mutually assured destruction, nuclear deterrence, nuclear war, Ronald Reagan
Reagan spoke of common concerns, the mutual desire for peace and the urgent need to address “dangerous misunderstandings” between Moscow and Washington.
14 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in economic history, economics of regulation, politics - Australia, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA, urban economics
Notice that New Zealand housing prices were pretty flat until the passage of the Resource Management Act in 1993.

14 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in applied welfare economics, economics of education, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA, poverty and inequality, welfare reform
There is a large literature on what money can buy in terms of improved child outcomes. Central to the left-wing view is the poorer are just like everyone else but they have less money. Susan Mayer, a proud registered Democrat all her life, kick-started the literature challenging this with her book in 1997.

More money does help the children of poor families but the effect is considerably less–and more complicated–than is generally thought because as Mayer says ‘once children’s basic material needs are met, characteristics of their parents become more important to how they turn out than anything additional money can buy.
Doubling the income of poor families would lift most children above the poverty line, it would have virtually no effect on their test scores and only a slight effect on social behaviour. Among her findings, which have largely survive the test of time, are:
Mayer found that as parents have more money to spend, they usually spend the extra money on food, especially food eaten in restaurants; larger homes; and on more automobiles. As a result, children are likely to be better housed and better fed, but not necessarily better educated or better prepared for high-income jobs. Mayer said that her findings do not endorse massive cuts in welfare:
My results do not show that we can cut income support programs with impunity…Indeed, they suggest that income support programs have been relatively successful in maintaining the material living standard of many poor children.
Mayer found that non-monetary factors play a bigger role than previously thought in determining how children overcome disadvantage as she explains. Parent-child interactions appear to be important for children’s success, but the study shows little evidence that a parent’s income has a large influence on parenting practices.
Mayer said that if money alone were responsible for overcoming such problems as unwed pregnancy, low educational achievement and male idleness, states with higher welfare benefits could expect to see reductions in these problems. In reality
once we control all relevant state characteristics, the apparent effect of increasing Aid to Families with Dependent Children benefits is very small.
Social economics has been here before. In the 1960s, the Coleman Report rather than finding that investing in schools improved child outcomes found that most variation between child outcomes depended on family backgrounds. When we talking about schools not matter in too much we are talking about average bad schools and average good school not American inner-city schools into war zones.

Source: Savings, Genes, and Fade-Out, Bryan Caplan | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty.
Behavioural genetics has been a bit of a blow to those that think greater parental investment can raise child outcomes as Bryan Caplan has explained:
Economists like Nobel laureate Gary Becker have been studying the family for decades. Like most modern parents, economists usually take it for granted that “parental investment” has large, lasting effects on adult outcomes.
And yet adoption and twin researchers find surprisingly little evidence for this this assumption(link is external)! With a few notable exceptions, the measured effect of upbringing on adult outcomes is small to zero. Adoptees barely resemble their adopting families, identical twins are much more similar than fraternal twins, and identical twins raised apart are often as similar as identical twins raised together. Almost all traits run in families, but the overarching reason is heredity.
Caplan notes that while it is extremely difficult for parental investments to change the adult outcomes of his children, it is well within his power to give his children a happy childhood.
14 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in economic history, politics - USA, Public Choice
The man most responsible for money in American politics is President Obama. He refused public funding in the 2008 presidential election of $84 million. This is because he could raise 10 times that online. Senator McCain accepted public funding because his fundraising prospects were so poor for the general election.

Source: The Crazy Cost of Becoming President, From Lincoln to Obama | Mother Jones
14 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in economic history, politics - Australia, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA, public economics Tags: growth of government, Norway, size of government, Sweden
13 Jan 2016 1 Comment
in labour economics, labour supply, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA
13 Jan 2016 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, labour economics, minimum wage, personnel economics, politics - USA Tags: living wage
Recent field research in San Francisco and North Carolina restaurants found that after San Francisco living wage increase, managers were pickier about whom they hire, because they want workers to be worth the higher cost. The San Francisco minimum wage is now $12.25, and all employers are required to offer paid sick days and contribute to their employees’ health insurance.

Source: How worker-friendly laws changed life as a server in San Francisco restaurants – The Washington Post.
The study is useful because of instead of studying the myths and realities about how a higher minimum wage somehow motivates workers to be more productive and offset part or all of its cost to employers, the study investigates how the minimum wage, a living wage, affects hiring standards.
Employers of low skilled, low-wage workers look for workers who are friendly and reliable. As the study concedes, you can teach people the skills they need as long as they are friendly and reliable.

In San Francisco, recruits not only have to be friendly and reliable, they are expected to have experience. The living wage shuts out inexperienced and new workers, which promotes social exclusion.
Minimum wage workers in San Francisco are noticeably older and better educated than those in North Carolina and recruited after more intensive sorting and screening against the hiring standards for the vacancy:
Rather than viewing servers as essentially interchangeable labourers who can be quickly and easily trained if they possess a modicum of personal hygiene and a friendly personality, employers in San Francisco exhibited a clear description of what a professional server was and the explicit and implicit skills required.
The study did not enquire into what happened to applicants who failed to meet the higher hiring standard induced by the living wage increase. As is standard with the champions of the living wage, they do not want to talk about those excluded by the living wage rise.
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