Bryan Caplan’s stint as guest blogger is over. His new gig is as co-blogger. Please welcome Bryan to what Steven Kirchner calls–in a hilarious post by the way, you must read it–The Bubble in Economics Blogs.
Bryan Caplan’s stint as guest blogger is over. His new gig is as co-blogger. Please welcome Bryan to what Steven Kirchner calls–in a hilarious post by the way, you must read it–The Bubble in Economics Blogs.
Mar 10 2005
Hedge Fund Guy writes, Costs of lending are always passed on to the consumer. No one is forced to lend (well, there is the Community Reinvestment Act, but that's a quid pro quo, and an exception), so lenders will either pass increased costs along, or withdraw from the highest risk market segments. Making it harder for...
Mar 7 2005
I've come across an essay by Herbert Spencer that is eerily reminiscent of the work of the late great Julian Simon. Writing in the late 19th-century, Spencer proposes the following relationship between objective conditions and public opinion: "[T]he more things improve the louder become the exclamations about their ba...
Mar 7 2005
Bryan Caplan's stint as guest blogger is over. His new gig is as co-blogger. Please welcome Bryan to what Steven Kirchner calls--in a hilarious post by the way, you must read it--The Bubble in Economics Blogs.
READER COMMENTS
Lancelot Finn
Mar 9 2005 at 6:18pm
This comment is completely opportunistic. I just posted an argument that, instead of restricting immigration, we should tax it. I thought your readers might be interested.
While I’m here, congrats, Bryan!
David Thomson
Mar 9 2005 at 9:10pm
Congratulations. I enjoy Bryan’s stuff. He’s an academic—but nobody’s perfect!
David Peterson
Mar 11 2005 at 10:19am
Awesome. Now if we could get Rustici to join one of these I’d be all set. 🙂
Comments are closed.