The Great Enrichment since 1979 in the USA

Over the past one-, two-, and three-decade periods, both middle class and poor households have experienced noticeable gains in living standards. Their gains are slower than those experienced by middle-income families in the earlier post-war era, but the gains are well above zero.

In 1980, in-kind benefits and employer and government spending on health insurance accounted for just 6% of the after-tax incomes of households in the middle one-fifth of the distribution. By 2010 these in-kind income sources represented 17% of middle class households’ after-tax income

…The broadest and most accurate measures of household income are published by the CBO. CBO’s newest estimates confirm the long-term trend toward greater inequality, driven mainly by turbo-charged gains in market income at the very top of the distribution. The market incomes of the top 1% are extraordinarily cyclical, however. They soar in economic expansions and plunge in recessions. Income changes since 2007 fit this pattern.

What many observers miss, however, is the success of the nation’s tax and transfer systems in protecting low- and middle-income Americans against the full effects of a depressed economy.

via Gary Burtless

Cease-fires and peace talks make it worse

HT: http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/foreigners/2014/02/cease_fires_and_peace_talks_make_it_worse_international_community_needs.html

The political divisions of North America since 1750

the political division of North America since 1750

HT vox.com

Robert Lucas on Social Security entitlement reform

HT: http://www.utc.edu/probasco-chair-free-enterprise/bmls/lucas_speech.php

I now know why incumbents are so keen on reforms that limit donations and campaign expenditure

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Who will run for president in 2016? Every Republican

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Who was the first president of the United States?

Ed Glaeser on the need for local government competition

Ed Glaecer are on local government competition

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What happens when a metropolitan area has way too many governments – The Washington Post

fragmented municipal government

The OECD, in a report on the "Metropolitan Century" we’ve just entered, found across all of its member countries that when you double the number of municipalities per 100,000 residents within a single metropolitan area, regional labour productivity falls by 5 to 6 percent.

In short: the more little governments you have, the less productive the entire local economy is.

via What happens when a metropolitan area has way too many governments – The Washington Post.

The anti-vaccination movement is drawn equally from across the political spectrum

anti-vaccination movement political spectrum

HT: www.culturalcognition.net – Cultural Cognition Blog – There is pervasive cultural consensus on the value of childhood vaccines in the U.S.; so why do people think that being anti-vaccine reflects any particular cultural predisposition?

Share of US federal budget for foreign aid – average guess 26%

https://twitter.com/conradhackett/status/568288883508580353

Al Gore Buys CA Shoreline Mansion…Awkward

Al Gore has snapped up an ocean front property in California. Obviously, rising sea levels are not any time soon for him when it comes to putting his money where his mouth is. The only explanation is that Mr. Gore does not actually believe his predictions of doom.

moodyeyeview's avatarMoody Eye View

Former Vice President Al Gore and his wife, Tipper, have added a Montecito/ Santa Barbara CA -area property to their real estate holdings, reports the Montecito Journal.

The couple spent $8,875,000 on an ocean-view villa on 1.5 acres with a swimming pool, spa and fountains, a real estate source familiar with the deal confirms. The Italian-style house has six fireplaces, five bedrooms and nine bathrooms.

Some of the most memorable images from Al Gore’s movie, An Inconvenient Truth, are the graphics that show how rising ocean levels will dramatically alter our planet’s coastlines. As Greenland’s ice sheets collapse, Gore predicts that our shores will be flooded and sea-bordering cities will sink beneath the water leaving millions of people homeless. His narration tells the audience that, due to global warming, melting ice could release enough water to cause at 20-foot rise in sea level “in the near future.” Al PT…

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The Un-discussed Foreign Policy Alternative | Coyote Blog

Why is there not a third alternative to be at least considered — that there is something really broken in a lot of Islam as practiced today (just as there was a lot of sh*t broken with Christianity in, say, the 14th-16th centuries) and that Islam as practiced in many Middle Eastern countries is wildly illiberal (way more illiberal than any failings of Israel, though you wouldn’t know that if you were living on a college campus).  But, that we don’t need to saddle up the troops and try to change things by force…

Yes, I know the first response to all folks like me who advocate for non-intervention is “Munich” and “Czechoslovakia”.  So be it.  But if we sent in the military every time someone yelled “appeasement” our aircraft would be worn out from moving troops around.  And we seem to be totally able to ignore atrocities and awful rulers in Sub-Saharan Africa.

As a minimum, I would like to see a coalition of Arab states coming to us and publicly asking us for help — not this usual Middle East BS we hear that Saudi Ariabi (or whoever) really in private wants us there but publicly they will still lambaste us.  Without this support we can win the war but we have no moral authority (as we did after WWII) in the peace.  Which is one reason so many of our interventions in the Middle East and North Africa fail.

via The Un-discussed Foreign Policy Alternative | Coyote Blog.

Today, over 1/2 of the world live in democracies

https://twitter.com/MaxCRoser/status/567954959943254016

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The ideologies of the 2016 Republican presidential contenders

ideology of presidential contenders Republican 2016

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