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The Importance of Principles

By Scott Sumner | Nov 17 2024
Given a choice between the rule of law and the law of rulers, I’d choose the former every time.  That’s even true if I happen to agree with the ideology of the people who are currently in change.  Thus I’ve consistently opposed “court packing”, regardless of which party is in power at the time. One ...

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The Importance of Diminishing Returns

By Scott Sumner | Nov 13 2024

In graduate school, I recall a professor suggesting that the rational expectations revolution would eventually lead to much better models of the macroeconomy. I was skeptical, and in my view, that didn’t happen. This is not because there is anything wrong with the rational expectations approach to macro, which I strong support. Rather I believe .. MORE

Featured Comment

The higher deficits are more likely to result in higher interest rates.  I don't expect the Fed to cave easily

Thomas L Hutcheson, November 16

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Books: Reviews and Suggested Readings

Great Moments in Compulsory Government IDs

By David Henderson | Nov 20, 2024 | 5

    In Revolution, Martin Anderson’s 1988 book about the Reagan revolution and about Marty’s role in things, Marty tells an interesting story about illegal immigration. On July 6, 1981, the Task Force on Immigration and Refugee Policy met in the White House. Marty was there. The Attorney General, William French Smith, presented his proposal .. MORE

Politics and Economics

Is California turning to the right?

By Scott Sumner | Nov 20, 2024 | 7

Recent referenda on the minimum wage produced some striking results: The California proposal to raise the minimum wage to $18 an hour in steps by 2026 narrowly failed, 51%-49%. Opponents and backers amassed a combined $1.8 million war chest for the issue — the lowest amount of all the propositions on Californians’ ballots this year, according .. MORE

Books: Reviews and Suggested Readings

Build, Baby, Build To Fight Climate Change

By Art Carden | Nov 20, 2024 | 2

The climate is getting hotter, and people are contributing to the change. What should we do about it? Many people think they’re fighting climate change and keeping the environment pristine by prohibiting development on huge chunks of land in California and otherwise making it prohibitively costly to build there. They’re wrong. Building restrictions in California .. MORE

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The Tail Wags the Dog

By Jon Murphy | Nov 20, 2024 | 4

In his 2018 book Expert Failure, Roger Koppl discusses the influence of “big players” on expert opinion (pages 214-215, 230).  A “Big Player” is an entity whose presence alone can influence individual behavior.  Where Roger gives the example of the IPCC and the intelligence system in the US, it seems we’re also seeing it now .. MORE

Politics and Economics

Do we understand elections?

By Scott Sumner | Nov 20, 2024 | 10

The media is full of analyses as to why Donald Trump defeated Kamala Harris in the recent election. At various times, I’ve mentioned factors like voter frustration over high inflation, illegal immigration, and woke excesses on college campuses. The more I think about the election, however, the less confidence I have in any single explanation. .. MORE

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A Strange Turning Point

By Kevin Corcoran | Nov 19, 2024 | 5

I enjoy reading intellectual biographies – books dedicated to exploring how a particular person’s thinking evolved and developed through their lifetime. This, too, applies to intellectual autobiographies, where thinkers describe their own journey about how they came to believe what they believe. Of course, all such accounts should be taken with a pinch of salt. .. MORE

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Bloggers David Henderson, Alberto Mingardi, Scott Sumner, Pierre Lemieux, Kevin Corcoran, and guests write on topical economics of interest to them, illuminating subjects from politics and finance, to recent films and cultural observations, to history and literature.

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Book Club

Books: Reviews and Suggested Readings

We at 100 1

The 20th century produced fictional dystopias besides real ones, yet the best known – like George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four – originated in liberal democracies. All, however, owe much to a novel from one from one of the real dystopias, We, by the Soviet Union’s Yevgeny Zamyatin. Born in 1887, Zamyatin became a  Bolshevik while a .. MORE

Economic Growth

Juliette Sellgren Interviews Henderson on the Latest Nobel Prize Winners 0

Juliette Sellgren, a senior and economics major at the University of Virginia, has a podcast titled “The Great Antidote.” In October, she interviewed me about the winners of the 2024 Nobel Prize in economics: Daron Acemoglu, Simon Johnson, and James Robinson. She contacted me because I wrote, as I have done in most years since .. MORE

Central Planning

The Problem With Economic Planning 13

Economic planning, where the government uses policies such as taxation, subsidies, spending, or nationalization, in order to direct economic outcomes, is back in vogue.  Its proponents often liken economic planning to planning done by individuals in the economy.  The difference, they claim, is that national economic planning can help accomplish larger economic, national, or social .. MORE

Book Reviews and Suggested Readings

Capitalism, Corruption, and the Ugly Pig

By Michael Munger

Book Review of What Went Wrong with Capitalism? by Ruchir Sharma.1 Capitalism has a “Pretty Pig” problem. The reference is to a state fair livestock contest, where there is a judging of the beauty of adult swine. There are only two entrants, because adult swine just aren’t pretty. The first pig is brought out, and .. MORE

The Religion Business

By Arnold Kling

This book is about how the world’s religions have gained such power, what they do with it, and how abuses of this power can be constrained. —Paul Seabright, The Divine Economy: How Religions Compete for Wealth, Power, and People,1 p. 6 Paul Seabright’s The Divine Economy investigates how religions gain adherents and acquire wealth and .. MORE

Rehabilitating Self-Help: Why Hayek Was Wrong about Samuel Smiles

By Roger Donway

In 1976, Friedrich Hayek effectively read Samuel Smiles out of the classical-liberal movement. In The Mirage of Social Justice, Hayek said that the work of Samuel Smiles (1812-1904) constitutes a snare and a delusion for pro-capitalists. Smiles’s defense of free enterprise, Hayek lamented, seemed to be “the only defence of it which is understood by .. MORE

Milton Friedman’s Many Battles

By Arnold Kling

Characteristically, Friedman had a contrarian take on the Washington consensus. Ironically, the turn toward markets gave new life to the classic institutions of the postwar managed economy, namely the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). No longer working to stabilize a gold-backed currency, the two international organizations offered loans to emerging economies—typically conditional .. MORE