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Ideas and Implications

By Kevin Corcoran | Apr 23 2024
Thomas Sowell frequently emphasizes the importance of thinking beyond the immediate and obvious impact of some economic policy and thinking through the larger implications. He actually wrote an entire book dedicated to this idea – Applied Economics: Thinking Beyond Stage One. A similar and useful exercise to evaluate an idea is to really try to ...

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Related Post

Is Nationalism Bad for Your Health?

By Scott Sumner | Apr 25 2024

In recent years, there has been increasing pressure to isolate the US from any sort of contact with the Chinese economy. The latest sector to be affected is healthcare, where there is a proposal to ban US drugmakers from contracting out various tasks to Chinese firms. Here’s The Economist: The knock-on effects for the Chinese .. MORE

Featured Comment

It seems to me your argument is actually that a State is a luxury good. Only the most wealthy states can apparently afford state-socialism (because of trying to "keep up with the Joneses"?).

Robert EV, April 28

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Free Markets

Tariffs are Sanctions Against Consumers

By Art Carden | Apr 29, 2024 | 0

Who do tariffs punish? Many people think they punish unscrupulous, shifty foreign manufacturers who aren’t playing fair and “dumping” their shoddy wares on American markets at prices below American producers’ costs, but that’s not true. Tariffs are sanctions and penalties imposed on American consumers for not paying enough. Governments regularly impose sanctions on other governments .. MORE

Regulation

How should we make housing more “affordable”?

By Scott Sumner | Apr 28, 2024 | 15

The OC Register reports that a California judge has struck down a new law allowing as many as four units on a single lot: “The Legislature finds and declares that ensuring access to affordable housing is a matter of statewide concern and not a municipal affair,” SB 9 states. “Therefore, … (this law applies) to .. MORE

Books: Reviews and Suggested Readings

My Weekly Reading for April 28, 2024

By David Henderson | Apr 28, 2024 | 1

Yet Another Drug War Failure by Ted Galen Carpenter, antiwar.com, April 23, 2024. Excerpt: Despite such spectacular policy failures, drug warriors in the United States and other countries cling to hard-line strategies and refuse to face an inconvenient economic truth.  Governments are not able to dictate whether people use mind-altering substances.  Such vices have been .. MORE

Economics of Crime

Robert MacNeil’s Axiom

By David Henderson | Apr 28, 2024 | 4

Pierre Lemieux’s excellent post on The Economist‘s dismissal of an argument against gun control reminded me of a line from, I think, one of Robert MacNeil’s books. He said, “It has always been axiomatic to me that easy access to firearms would lead to more crime, in particular, homicide.” See the problem? It’s not axiomatic. .. MORE

Incentives

The Economist‘s Irrational Fear

By Pierre Lemieux | Apr 28, 2024 | 37

I mentioned in a previous post that The Economist appears to lose all rationality when one specific topic is broached. The writer of the magazine’s April 20 newsletter “The World in Brief” gave another illustration in the section “The Day Ahead”: he could not mention the 25th anniversary of the horrible Columbine school massacre without doing .. MORE

International Macroeconomics

The Centralization of Power

By Scott Sumner | Apr 26, 2024 | 10

Hardly a day goes by without further evidence that the world is moving toward Viktor Orban-style authoritarian nationalism. Here’s the latest piece of evidence, from the WSJ: A small group of the former president’s allies—whose work is so secretive that even some prominent former Trump economic aides weren’t aware of it—has produced a roughly 10-page .. MORE

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Books: Reviews and Suggested Readings

My Weekly Reading for April 28, 2024 1

Yet Another Drug War Failure by Ted Galen Carpenter, antiwar.com, April 23, 2024. Excerpt: Despite such spectacular policy failures, drug warriors in the United States and other countries cling to hard-line strategies and refuse to face an inconvenient economic truth.  Governments are not able to dictate whether people use mind-altering substances.  Such vices have been .. MORE

Books: Reviews and Suggested Readings

On Fairness – Aesop vs Sesame Street 0

The YouTube algorithm is a mysterious thing. It’s supposed to recommend videos you might like, based on videos you’ve watched and rated before, but as far as I can tell the recommendations are generated randomly by a half-asleep chimpanzee. Still, just as broken clocks are still right twice a day, random suggestions can manage to .. MORE

Adam Smith

Wisdom on Worth and Work 4

What do we desire from our lives and our work? In October of 2023, I participated in a debate at my college, Western Carolina University, regarding whether gender affirming care for minors should be banned. When it was my turn, I mostly stuck to the facts. I cited medical organizations, doctors, and meta-analyses. Though we were .. MORE

Book Reviews and Suggested Readings

Mises and Buchanan on Classical Liberalism versus Socialism

By Alejandra Salinas

Ludwig von Mises The works of Ludwig von Mises and James M. Buchanan reflect the best of the classical liberal intellectual tradition. Given the centenary of the publication of Mises’ Socialism,1 and since 2023 marked the tenth anniversary of the passing of Buchanan, it seems an excellent time to remember their contributions. Both defend methodological .. MORE

Humanomics: Moral Sentiments and Wealth of Nations for the Twenty-First Century.

By Maria Pia Paganelli

What is Humanomics?1 It sounds like a combination of human and economics. And indeed this book by Vernon Smith and Bart Wilson can be read as an attempt to reintroduce the human component into economics. It can be read as a criticism of modern economics and as the presentation of a substitute for it. It .. MORE

The Good Life Is the One Where Anxiety Falls by the Wayside

By James Broughel

Book Review of Living for Pleasure: An Epicurean Guide to Life, by Emily A. Austin.1 The name Epicurus is often associated with indulgent hedonism. This stereotypical mischaracterization, which has found its way into pop culture and even into supermarket names, suggests a life of excess is the route to happiness. However, a new book by .. MORE

Jonathan Rauch and the Knowledge Problem

By Arnold Kling

In this book I have supplemented “liberal science” with the term “reality-based community,” by which I mean the social network which adheres to liberal science’s rules and norms…. The community’s interactions are structured and elaborate and amount to much more than just the sum of its individuals’ doings, and the essential enablers, connectors, and transmitters .. MORE