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Assorted links
1. Is Buffalo really hopeless?
2. Which paintings sell for more?, Financial Times Deutschland
3. Books to base your life on, by Ryan Holiday
4. One cheer for asset securitization, me on NPR Marketplace
5. Takes on fall books, on Slate, one segment is yours truly on the new Charles Taylor
Posted by Tyler Cowen on October 31, 2007 at 05:42 PM in Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (18)
Rational Expectations
I can report that the sugar high in children begins long before the sugar hits the bloodstream.
Posted by Alex Tabarrok on October 31, 2007 at 05:00 PM in Law | Permalink | Comments (13)
Why macroeconomics is not a science
The housing sector is down twenty percent and the price of oil is flirting with $90 a barrel, maybe $100 to come. Yet the quarterly growth rate was just reported at 3.9%, led by surges in consumer spending and exports. It is wrong to think we have turned the corner, but it is also wrong to think the doomsayers have been giving accurate predictions.
Posted by Tyler Cowen on October 31, 2007 at 11:39 AM in Current Affairs | Permalink | Comments (23)
The economics of Halloween
A reform proposal from Kevin Hassett: "So let's do something to reform Halloween. The first step would be for Halloween donors to give kids money instead of candy. Kids could then go to the supermarket the next day and binge on the candies they really like. That solution would get an A-plus in economics."
Linked here. But alas, in-kind transfers are often more efficient than cash gifts, and that holds for public policy as well. (Imagine giving "money to buy kidney dialysis," instead of "kidney dialysis," and see how many people fake kidney disease.) The candy transfer insures that a) mostly young kids do the asking, and b) at some point everyone just stops and goes home. I've long wanted to know how much movie attendance rises on Halloween evening, given that the real cost of going is suddenly and temporarily much lower.
Addendum: Here is a new paper on cash vs. in-kind transfers.
Posted by Tyler Cowen on October 31, 2007 at 08:36 AM in Economics | Permalink | Comments (29)
The economic value of teeth
Looks and height matter for economic outcomes, so why not teeth?
Healthy teeth are a vital and visible component of general well-being, but there is little systematic evidence to demonstrate any impact on the labor market. In this paper, we examine the effect of oral health on labor market outcomes by exploiting variation in access to fluoridated water during childhood. The politics surrounding the adoption of water fluoridation by local water districts suggests exposure to fluoride during childhood is exogenous to other factors affecting earnings. We find that children who grew up in communities with fluoridated water earn approximately 3% more as adults than children who did not. The effect is larger for women than men, and is almost exclusively concentrated amongst those from families of low socioeconomic status. Of the channels explored, we find that occupational sorting explains 14-23% of the effect, suggesting consumer and employer discrimination are the likely driving factors.
That is by Sherry Glied and Matthew Neidell; here is the paper on-line, note their findings are preliminary not final. Teeth seem to matter less for rich people because they have later chances to cover up -- using money of course -- for bad childhood teeth. The poor apparently remain stuck with their teeth problems. You might think that childhood exposure to fluoride is just proxying for quality of county and thus county human capital in some way, but the fluoride/earnings correlation seems to hold up even when variables are used to adjust for county quality. Can you dissent from a paper that writes:
...the anecdotes described above suggest that people who lack teeth may have trouble finding jobs.
I thank a loyal MR reader for the pointer.
Addendum: Here is Caplan (and Blinder) on the economics of teeth.
Posted by Tyler Cowen on October 31, 2007 at 07:34 AM in Medicine | Permalink | Comments (20)
Borjas on Indoctrination
According to FIRE, The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education:
The University of Delaware subjects students in its residence halls to a shocking program of ideological reeducation that is referred to in the university’s own materials as a “treatment” for students’ incorrect attitudes and beliefs....
The university’s views are forced on students through a comprehensive manipulation of the residence hall environment, from mandatory training sessions to “sustainability” door decorations. Students living in the university’s eight housing complexes are required to attend training sessions, floor meetings, and one-on-one meetings with their Resident Assistants (RAs). The RAs who facilitate these meetings have received their own intensive training from the university, including a “diversity facilitation training” session at which RAs were taught, among other things, that “[a] racist is one who is both privileged and socialized on the basis of race by a white supremacist (racist) system. The term applies to all white people (i.e., people of European descent) living in the United States, regardless of class, gender, religion, culture or sexuality.”
George Borjas writes:
Why am I super-sensitive to this? Because as a young boy I myself went through a one-year course in ideological reorientation. I attended an elite elementary Catholic school in Havana. Castro took over, the Catholic school was shut down, and I got transferred to a revolutionary school where the entire day was spent teaching Marxist-Leninist ideology. Luckily, this lasted only a year and I continued my education in Miami (where the entire school day was instead spent talking about the upcoming football game). I am certain that the blind zealotry that I saw in the young teacher's eyes that year turned me off from that particular way of viewing the world for the rest of my life. One can only hope that many of the students forced to attend the re-education programs at Delaware and other universities react in the same way.
I'd be interested to hear from anyone with first hand experience of the University of Delaware program.
Posted by Alex Tabarrok on October 31, 2007 at 07:05 AM in Education | Permalink | Comments (49)
Clive Crook is blogging
Here, some of the early posts are responses to Krugman and DeLong. Clive has been the FT's Washington columnist since April 2007 and is formerly of The Economist.
Posted by Tyler Cowen on October 30, 2007 at 09:33 PM in Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (10)
Assorted Links
- The Impact of Milton Friedman on Modern Monetary Economics. A nice review by Edward Nelson and Anna Schwartz of Friedman's thought and influence over monetary policy that also, in the author's words, sets the record straight on Paul Krugman's 'Who was Milton Friedman.'
- The world may be getting smaller but big Americans are sinking the boats at Disney's It's a Small World.
- The Ayn Rand Lexicon is now online.
Posted by Alex Tabarrok on October 30, 2007 at 02:48 PM in Data Source | Permalink | Comments (22)
Carmen Laforet
Nada, her book, is even better, a true case of a rediscovered classic, now out in a first-rate English translation.
Posted by Tyler Cowen on October 30, 2007 at 02:25 PM in Data Source | Permalink | Comments (32)
America fact of the day
America has 62 percent of the world's [scientist] stars as residents, primarily because of its research universities which produce them.
Here is the paper, and, addended, here are non-gated versions.
Posted by Tyler Cowen on October 30, 2007 at 10:28 AM in Science | Permalink | Comments (19)