
How can food insecurity be so linked to obesity but still be a meaningful measure of deprivation? The poor were thin in my day.
08 Jul 2019 Leave a comment
in health economics, politics - New Zealand Tags: child poverty, economics of obesity

Whole paper bag for 1 tiny piece of ginger under @EugenieSage’s #plasticbagfascism
06 Jul 2019 Leave a comment
in environmental economics, politics - New Zealand Tags: offsetting behavior, recycling, The fatal conceit

And the @NZGreens @maramardavidson still wonder why some kids are taken into care
05 Jul 2019 Leave a comment

Car is now a 3 seater. Must store in back seat so I can see if stockpile has ran out under @EugenieSage’s #plasticbagfascism
05 Jul 2019 Leave a comment
in politics - New Zealand Tags: offsetting behaviour, recycling, The fatal conceit, unintended consequences

@_AAAP_prioritises virtue signalling over effective lobbying for more for the poorest mothers on the benefit
05 Jul 2019 Leave a comment

@OECD via @GarethShute @TheSpinoffTV show how small the cost of #globalwarming will be. GDP will several fold larger in 2100 so roll with the punches is best policy
05 Jul 2019 Leave a comment
in applied welfare economics, development economics, energy economics, environmental economics, global warming, politics - New Zealand Tags: climate alarmism

Yet another health hazard from @EugenieSage’s #plasticbagfascism
04 Jul 2019 Leave a comment
in environmental economics, health economics, politics - New Zealand Tags: recycling

Nick Cohen on Noam Chomsky and the Far-Left’s Anti-Semitism, narcissism and bigotry
04 Jul 2019 Leave a comment
in defence economics, discrimination, economics of crime, law and economics, politics - Australia, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA Tags: political correctness, regressive left
Redline thinks I’m a racist scumbag for not feeling sorry for gang member behind bars
03 Jul 2019 Leave a comment
in economics of crime, politics - New Zealand

From https://rdln.wordpress.com/2018/05/29/a-response-to-jim-rose-on-maori-prison-population/ in response to https://www.stuff.co.nz/dominion-post/comment/104107156/extra-prisoners-are-nearly-all-gang-members–thats-hardly-a-crisis
@paulkrugman on @ProfSteveKeen
01 Jul 2019 Leave a comment
in macroeconomics, politics - New Zealand

From https://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/04/02/oh-my-steve-keen-edition/ and see https://creditwritedowns.com/2012/04/banks-matter-krugmans-barter-mysticism.html for the text of broken link
Why am I reminded of Neoclassical Economics? Let me count the ways…
Firstly, there are similar underlying principles to the DSGE models that now dominate Neoclassical macroeconomics, and as with Ptolemaic Astronomy, these underlying principles clearly fail to describe the real world. They are:
- All markets are barter systems which are in equilibrium at all times in the absence of exogenous shocks—even during recessions—and after a shock they will rapidly return to equilibrium via instantaneous adjustments to relative prices;
- The preferences of consumers and the technology employed by firms are the “deep parameters” of the economy, which are unaltered by any policies set by economic policy makers; and
- Perfect competition is universal, ensuring that the equilibrium described in (1) is socially optimal.
If that were actually the real world, then not only would there not be a crisis now, there would never have been a Great Depression either—and recessions would simply be minor statistically unpredictable but inevitable events when the majority of shocks hitting the economy were negative, and they would rapidly be resolved by adjustments to relative prices (wages included, of course).
So economists like Krugman—who describe themselves as “New Keynesians”—have tweaked the base case to derive models that “ape” real-world data, with “sticky” prices rather than perfectly flexible ones, “frictions” that slow down quantity adjustments, and imperfect competition to generate less-than-optimal social outcomes.
This is Ptolemaic Economics: take a model that is utterly unlike the real world, and which in its pure form can’t possibly fit real world data, and then add “imperfections” so that it can appear to do so.
Unintended consequences of @eugeniesage’s #plasticbagfascism
01 Jul 2019 Leave a comment
in economics of regulation, environmental economics, politics - New Zealand Tags: offsetting behaviour, recycling, The fatal conceit, unintended consequences

The environmental curse of @eugeniesage’s #plasticbagfascism
01 Jul 2019 Leave a comment
in economics of regulation, environmental economics, politics - New Zealand Tags: offsetting behaviour, recycling, The fatal conceit, unintended consequences

End of Life Choice Bill – Second Reading – @dbseymour @actparty
26 Jun 2019 Leave a comment
in law and economics, politics - New Zealand
Is everything the left and unions say about labour shares and inequality a measurement error or just a bad theory
26 Jun 2019 Leave a comment
in econometerics, economic history, labour economics, politics - Australia, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA, poverty and inequality Tags: pessimism bias


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