
There is a message in here somewhere
12 Nov 2017 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, economics of regulation, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA, urban economics Tags: land supply, zoning
Little wonder JFK bribed his way passed navy medical. Little chance of political career otherwise
12 Nov 2017 Leave a comment
in defence economics, economic history, politics - USA, Public Choice
Who pays taxes in the USA?
10 Nov 2017 Leave a comment
in politics - USA, public economics Tags: top 1%
Real Time – Bill Maher on SJWs (Social Justice Warriors) and Crazy Political Correctness
31 Oct 2017 Leave a comment
in liberalism, politics - USA, television Tags: political correctness
Political activists hold more extreme positions than the average voter for their party
24 Oct 2017 Leave a comment
in politics - USA, Public Choice

Political activists in any political party have such different opinions to the average supporter for that party is it is often advised that they not go door-knocking. The chart above for 2017 and below for 1994 compares the politically engaged with the views of the median Democrat and Republican.

Political activists who go doorknocking are more likely to put a voter off because of their interest in issues that simply do not interest the average voter for their party, much less the swinging voter.
This gap between the average party activist and average supporter of that party at the ballot box also explains why too many political activists explain political defeat in terms of the voters being wrong.
But is a living wage policy still worth a try?
24 Oct 2017 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, minimum wage, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA
https://twitter.com/EconBizFin/status/626687442834300928
Demands for massive pay rises for the low-paid are not just confined to New Zealand. The US debate is worth reviewing because their living wage advocates are so upfront about the job losses.
US living wage activists such as Fight for $15 want to double their federal minimum wage from $7.25 per hour to $15 per hour. California, New York, San Francisco and Seattle are among the states and cities increasing their local minimum wages, currently of up to $12, to $15 by 2021 or 2022.
Some such as Arindrajit Dube say that these very large wage increases by cities and states in their federal system are experiments “worth running and monitoring” (Lane 2016). As Dube said recently:
“… 30 to 40 percent of the California workforce will get a raise … This will be a big experiment. It’s far outside of our evidence base…
If you’re risk-averse, this would not be the scale at which to try things. On the other hand, if you think that wages are really low and they’ve been low for a really long time and we can afford to take some risks, doing things at this scale will get us more evidence” (Lee 2016).
Noah Smith (2016) concluded that the empirical literature on minimum wages suggests that a 10% minimum wage increase would reduce employment by about 2% so doubling the federal minimum wage would see the employment of young people go down by one-fifth. Smith (2016) said this is a “small but real effect — a $15 federal minimum wage might throw a million kids out of work”.
Should activists use minimum wage breadwinners for policy experiments? Noah Smith (2016) considers balancing the one million unemployed teenagers against the wage gains for adults as “necessary for a decision”.
Smith suggests that the large minimum wage increases in some US states and cities will tell us how big this welfare trade-off between jobs and wage rises is:
We don’t really know what happens when you raise the minimum wage to $15 — but soon, we will know. We will be able to see whether employment rates fall in L.A., Seattle, and San Francisco. We will be able to see whether people who can’t get work migrate from these cities to cities with lower minimum wages.
We will be able to see if employment growth suddenly slows after the enactment of the policy. In other words, federalism will do its job, by allowing cities to act as policy laboratories for the rest of the country (Smith 2015).
“Big experiments” involving large minimum wage increases to “provide clear evidence” to quote Dube’s words (Scheiber and Lovett 2016) are wrongheaded as Robert Lucas has explained:
I want to understand the connection between in the money supply and economic depressions. One way to demonstrate that I understand this connection–I think the only really convincing way–would be for me to engineer a depression in the United States by manipulating the U.S. money supply.
I think I know how to do this, though I’m not absolutely sure, but a real virtue of the democratic system is that we do not look kindly on people who want to use our lives as a laboratory. So I will try to make my depression somewhere else (Lucas 1988).
Leading reasons for economic theory, empirical research and the study of economic history are to warn the present against repeating past errors and not try experiments that are folly (Rosen 1993). There is too much group think and not enough courage of your vocation (see Dylan Matthew’s tweet below).
https://twitter.com/dylanmatt/status/720786520509165568
Australian-born economist Justin Wolfers is frank about the wishful thinking in the US debate:
But if you are interested in what level to set the minimum wage, the existing literature is nearly hopeless. Plausible reforms lie far outside the bounds of historical experience.
We don’t have useful estimates of the extent to which employment effects vary with the minimum wage. Since policymakers tend to implement short-run fixes, we know a lot about the effects of temporary reforms, but very little about the consequences of lasting reform (Wolfers 2016).
Most of the empirical studies are of the jobs lost over the next few years. When estimates have a 10 to 15-year horizon with time enough for entry, exit and technological adaptation and automation, a “long-run disemployment effect that is five times larger than the short-run effect” is in evidence (Aaronson, French, Sorkin 2016; Aaronson, French, Sorkin and To forthcoming; Sorkin 2015).
More on down and out in America
23 Oct 2017 Leave a comment
in politics - USA, poverty and inequality
Living Space: Europeans Versus Poor Americans
23 Oct 2017 Leave a comment
in politics - USA, poverty and inequality
Feeling of powerlessness and voicelessness was a much better predictor of Trump support than age, race, college attainment, income, attitudes towards Muslims, illegal immigrants, or Hispanic identity
23 Oct 2017 Leave a comment
in discrimination, politics - USA, Public Choice
The condescension of the politically correct
21 Oct 2017 Leave a comment
in economics of religion, liberalism, politics - USA
Why Bernie Sanders’ Medicare for All is a Bad Idea
19 Oct 2017 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, health economics, politics - USA Tags: health insurance
Trump studies!
18 Oct 2017 Leave a comment
in politics - USA, Public Choice Tags: political correctness






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