The high cost of low prices

Whereas Great Depression America valued well-made utilitarian products and understood the inherent danger of bargain culture, Great Recession America prioritizes discounts at the expense of everything else. From The high cost of low prices Great point.

The Great American Cleaving

this is the first time in the history of exit polling that moderates were not the largest ideological voting block. They were trumped by conservatives. Instead of moving toward the middle, we are drifting toward the extremes. From The Great American Cleaving The problem is that ideology is easy and policy is hard. Partisan media… Continue reading The Great American Cleaving

A Mechanical Manifesto

it’s conservative economists who insist that people are always rational and utility-maximizing; liberal economists are the ones willing to invoke bounded rationality, animal spirits, etc.. The whole salt-water fresh-water split was about which you were going to believe: the assumption of perfect maximization, or your own lying eyes. And the Keynesians were the ones who… Continue reading A Mechanical Manifesto

The Politics of Erskine-Bowles

I think that this is a blueprint that conservatives should regard favorably, all things considered. But let’s be clear: The cuts it proposes don’t even remotely “slash the size of government”; they merely slow its future growth. By my back-of-the-envelope calculations, federal revenue has hovered around 18.3 percent of G.D.P. since 1980, breaking 20 percent… Continue reading The Politics of Erskine-Bowles

A thought about Charlie Rangel

The same demagogic blow hards like Rush and Hannity who are calling the dems racists for backing the ethics investigations of Charlie Rangel would be decrying reverse-racism if the charges were dropped.

GOP Economic Nihilism watch

Republicans would oppose anything that might help the economy on Obama’s watch. That is, they’re opposing QE not on the grounds that it won’t work, but because they’re afraid that it will. From GOP Economic Nihilism watch So much for bipartisanship policy making.

Will America Fall Prey To A British Disease?

[Britain] failed to develop a coherent policy response to the financial crisis of the 1930’s. Its political parties, rather than working together to address pressing economic problems, remained at each other’s throats. The country turned inward. Its politics grew fractious, its policies erratic, and its finances increasingly unstable. In short, Britain’s was a political, not… Continue reading Will America Fall Prey To A British Disease?