
Law-Abiding Immigrants
08 Sep 2023 Leave a comment
in economic history, economics of crime, labour economics, labour supply, law and economics, occupational choice Tags: economics of immigration, law and order
The subtitle is The Incarceration Gap Between Immigrants and the U.S.-Born, 1850–2020, and the authors are Ran Abramitzky, Leah Boustan, Elisa Jácome, Santiago Pérez, and Juan David Torres. Here is the to-the-point abstract: Combining full-count Census data with Census/ACS samples, the researchers provide the first nationally representative long-run series (1870–2020) of incarceration rates for immigrants […]
Law-Abiding Immigrants
The Mother Church of the Common Law
08 Sep 2023 Leave a comment

The Temple Church is a small church in London built in 1185 by the Knights Templar. It’s now hidden behind Fleet Street amid the Middle and Inner Temple, two of the four “Inns of Court”, the educational institutions and professional associations for common law barristers and judges. The Temple Church is known as the Mother Church of the […]
The Mother Church of the Common Law
CITIZEN SCIENCE: Social justice warriors
08 Sep 2023 Leave a comment
One of the strangest aspects of entering Transworld, as a parent, is the absolute prohibition on not only discussion or analysis, but even thought, on whether it is a good idea to agree with small children and tumultuous teenagers that their gender doesn’t match their body, and that therefore their body and social environment must…
CITIZEN SCIENCE: Social justice warriors
Fire In The Sky – Zeppelin Shot Down Over Britain I THE GREAT WAR Week 111
08 Sep 2023 Leave a comment
in defence economics, war and peace Tags: World War I
Just making stuff up: the chair of the RB Board and the blackball on expertise
07 Sep 2023 Leave a comment

The government-appointed (and reappointed) chair of the Reserve Bank Board has been in the news today, after the reports earlier this week that in his role as Vice-Chancellor of Waikato University he’d been negotiating policy around a future new medical school at Waikato with National’s health spokesman Shane Reti. I don’t have any particular problem […]
Just making stuff up: the chair of the RB Board and the blackball on expertise
September 7, 1533: Birth of Queen Elizabeth I of England and Ireland
07 Sep 2023 Leave a comment
Elizabeth I (September 7, 1533 – March 24, 1603) was Queen of England and Ireland from November 17, 1558 until her death in 1603. Elizabeth was the last monarch of the House of Tudor and is sometimes referred to as the “Virgin Queen”. Elizabeth was born at Greenwich Palace on September 7 ,1533 and was […]
September 7, 1533: Birth of Queen Elizabeth I of England and Ireland
Debating tax
06 Sep 2023 Leave a comment
I was a last-minute stand-in for Ruth Richardson at Monday evening’s debate at Vic Uni, hosted by the Free Speech Union. The moot: “The tax system is unfair and the wealthy must pay more.”Moots are fun. You don’t have to argue what you believe, but it’s easier and more convincing if you find angles sufficiently adjacent…
Debating tax
Just watched a documentary on Bernie Madoff and his gullible investors
06 Sep 2023 Leave a comment
in economic history, economics of crime, financial economics, law and economics Tags: active investing

Sunak is finally standing up to the green Blob
06 Sep 2023 Leave a comment
in energy economics, environmental economics, global warming
By Paul Homewood The Government is rejecting a proposed moratorium on airport expansion. The Climate Change Act must now be reformed The Climate Change Committee and its deliberations may not yet be the subject of wide public debate, but its recommendations are beginning to have a massive impact on all our lives – […]
Sunak is finally standing up to the green Blob
Creative destruction
06 Sep 2023 Leave a comment
in entrepreneurship, financial economics, industrial organisation Tags: creative destruction

Liberty Scott on National’s Transport Policy
05 Sep 2023 Leave a comment
Liberty Scott is the name of a blog run by a Libertarian who spent a lot of time overseas but who appears to have returned to New Zealand, judging by his blog becoming a lot more active recently. While he does write about economics and other topics his speciality is transport and there are very […]
Liberty Scott on National’s Transport Policy
Thinking about fiscal policy
05 Sep 2023 Leave a comment

The numbers The Treasury will release in its PREFU next week will make it fairly easy to follow some bits of New Zealand fiscal policy over time, less so others, but do almost nothing to facilitate international comparisons, and discourage New Zealand users and analysts from looking at fiscal policy in the way most other […]
Thinking about fiscal policy
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