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In Does Ethics Have a Chance in a World of Consumers? Bauman, a former communist, argues that we would be better off altogether if we could control our need for “stuff”.

The longer book review is of interest.  The longer book is not.  In other words, Bauman has helped me control my need for "stuff."

Posted by Tyler Cowen on September 6, 2008 at 06:57 PM in Books | Permalink | Comments (15)

Rational Spelling

Here's a great, little video from Ed Rondthaler former president of the American Literacy Council and author of The Dictionary of Simplified American Spelling.  Loyal readers will know that simplified spelling or what I call rational spelling holds a special place in my heart.

I worry that the tyranny of spell checkers impedes evolution towards rational spelling.

Hat tip to Boing Boing.

Posted by Alex Tabarrok on September 6, 2008 at 12:52 PM in Science | Permalink | Comments (28)

Is this a sustainable business model?

Alternatively, you could call this "Markets in Everything":

The secret-spilling site Wikileaks announced this week that it's acquired thousands of e-mails belonging to a top aide to Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez. But don't look for them online. In a departure from its full-disclosure past, Wikileaks is auctioning off the cache to the highest bidder.

Wikileaks began soliciting bids from media organizations on Tuesday, for what it describes as thousands of e-mails and attachments from 2005 to 2008 that provide insight into Chavez's management, CIA activities in Venezuela and the Bolivarian revolution.

The winner gets exclusivity and embargoed access to the documents, though Wikileaks will publish all of them eventually.

Here is more.

Posted by Tyler Cowen on September 6, 2008 at 07:53 AM in Web/Tech | Permalink | Comments (10)

Why are governors in small states so popular?

Ezra Klein channels Andrew Gelman:

...small states tend to be more approving of their governors. Why? Gelman has some theories: "In a large state, there will be more ambitious politicians on the other side, eager to knock off the incumbent governor; small states often have part-time legislatures and thus the governor is involved in less political conflict; small states (notably Alaska) tend to get more funds per capita from the federal government, and it’s easier to be popular when you can disburse more funds; large states tend to be more heterogeneous and so it’s harder to keep all the voters happy. As the graphs show, the pattern isn’t perfect, but it looks real to me."

I have an additional hypothesis.  People from small states, especially atypical small states, sometimes have an inferiority complex vis-a-vis the other states or regions.  Taking pride in their politicians is one way of compensating for that.  Furthermore there is often less to do in underpopulated states and is not pride sometimes a substitute for action?  New Yorkers are not in fact so proud of the Metropolitan Opera, but in parts of Wisconsin the Green Bay Packers are king.

Posted by Tyler Cowen on September 6, 2008 at 07:34 AM in Political Science | Permalink | Comments (30)

Do economists think TV is good for you?

In a nutshell, yes:

The variation Mr. Gentzkow and Mr. Shapiro exploited was the timing of the introduction of TV into different cities. Television began taking off in the U.S. in 1946, after a wartime ban on TV production was lifted. But the Federal Communications Commission stopped granting new commercial television licenses from September 1948 to April 1952 while it made changes in allocating broadcast spectrum. There was a long lag between when some cities got television and when others did.

The economists then looked at results of a survey of 800 U.S. schools that administered tests to 346,662 sixth-grade, ninth-grade and 12th-grade students in 1965. Their finding: Adjusting for differences in household income, parents' educational background and other factors, children who lived in cities that gave them more exposure to television in early childhood performed better on the tests than those with less exposure.

The economists found that television was especially positive for children in households where English wasn't the primary language and parents' education level was lower. "We don't exactly know why that is, but a plausible interpretation is that the effect of television on cognitive development depends on what other kinds of activity television is substituting for," says Mr. Shapiro, 28.

Here is much more.  And yes the "Mr. Shapiro" is in fact Wunderkind Jesse Shapiro, a familiar figure to MR readers everywhere.  You'll find two versions of the paper here.

Addendum: Here is Alex's excellent post on the topic.

Posted by Tyler Cowen on September 6, 2008 at 06:34 AM in Television | Permalink | Comments (9)