Selasa, 29 Oktober 2013

Who knew what when?

President Obama is getting heat over his often repeated claim that, under his healthcare reform, "If you like your plan, you can keep it."  It is clear now that for millions of Americans, particularly those who participated in the individual insurance market, that is simply not true.  You can argue that the plan they will get under the Affordable Care Act is better, but it seems undeniable that the President's sales pitch was factually incorrect.

As someone who has previously worked for a President, I am fascinated by how the White House staff let President Obama so consistently and so publicly make a false statement.  Presidential speeches undergo a painstakingly thorough review process. It seems that there are only three possibilities:

1. The White House staff did not know the statement was false.  That is, they did not understand the law the administration was promoting.

2. The White House staff knew the statement was false, but they decided to keep this fact from the President.  That is, they let the President unwittingly lie to the American people.

3. The White House staff knew the statement was false and told the President so, but the President decided to keep saying it anyway.  That is, the President consciously decided to lie to the American people.

These are the only three possibilities I can envision.  None of them reflects particularly well on what has been going on in the White House.

Minggu, 27 Oktober 2013

Fact-checking The Economist

Here is a question for students who are learning about compounding.  What is wrong with the following passage from The Economist magazine?
Investors who bought Treasury bonds in 1946, when yields were around current levels, did not suffer a formal default. But over the following 35 years they lost money in real terms at a rate of 2% a year. The cumulative real loss was 91%. By that standard, Greek creditors, who recently suffered a 50% loss via default, were lucky.
Answer: The second number is inconsistent with the first.  Note that .98^35=.49, so we get only a 51 percent cumulative loss.

In fact, the price level from 1946 to 1981 rose by a factor of about 5, so holding currency with a zero nominal return led to a real loss of only about 80 percent.

Selasa, 22 Oktober 2013

The median voter changes his mind

click on graphic to enlarge

The Government Shutdown

The CEA analyzes its economic impact.

"Say That" nominated for 'Innovation of the Year' in first ever YouTube Music Video Awards

Toro y Moi's video for "Say That" has been nominated for the 'Innovation of the Year' award in the very first YouTube Music Video Awards!

Watch the nomination video below, then share it on Facebook or Twitter to cast your vote. 


New Research on UI

The abstract of a recent NBER working paper (emphasis added):
We exploit a policy discontinuity at U.S. state borders to identify the effects of unemployment insurance policies on unemployment. Our estimates imply that most of the persistent increase in unemployment during the Great Recession can be accounted for by the unprecedented extensions of unemployment benefit eligibility. In contrast to the existing recent literature that mainly focused on estimating the effects of benefit duration on job search and acceptance strategies of the unemployed -- the micro effect -- we focus on measuring the general equilibrium macro effect that operates primarily through the response of job creation to unemployment benefit extensions. We find that it is the latter effect that is very important quantitatively.

Senin, 21 Oktober 2013

Yes, Economics is a Science

Says my Harvard colleague Raj Chetty.

An interesting article, which raises the following questions in my mind: Is the younger generation of economists like Raj skipping some of the big questions of economics because some smaller questions are easier to answer?  If so, is that optimal from the standpoint of society as a whole?

Minggu, 20 Oktober 2013

Videos in 7e

The seventh edition of my favorite textbook will be coming out in January. One of the new features available to users of the electronic version of the book is a group of video introductions to many chapters, featuring the book's all-too-geeky author. You can see the first one below.

Jumat, 18 Oktober 2013

A Trip to Korea

I have spent the past few days at the World Knowledge Forum in Seoul, Korea. While there, I gave a lecture on some of the challenges facing fiscal policy, joined Tyler Cowen in a public discussion of economic inequality, and participated in a panel on the global economic outlook (from which the photo below is taken).

Sabtu, 12 Oktober 2013

On DC Discord

Click here to read my column in Sunday's NY Times.

All the Way

Last night, I saw Bryan Cranston in All the Way, the new play about Lyndon Johnson and the passage of the Civil Rights Act. It is a powerful play, with terrific acting.  Cranston is as compelling as LBJ as he was as Walter White.

Rabu, 09 Oktober 2013

Obamacare's Finances

Not a pretty picture.

I talk to Bloomberg TV

Limited amount of Campo 7"s left























There are a limited amount of Campo 7"s left in the Carpark Records online store.  Pick up a copy HERE while they last.

Congratulations, Janet

Click on graphic to enlarge.
President Obama has made a great decision in choosing Janet Yellen to chair the Federal Reserve.
The image above, by the way, is one of the illustrations in the next edition of my favorite textbook (which is now in production). When supervising the artist, I had to guess who the next Fed chair would be.  As you can see, I guessed right.

Addendum: Someone asks whether the helicopter in the picture is a reference to the current chairman's somewhat pejorative nickname "Helicopter Ben."  The answer is no, not at all.  I used a helicopter in this interior illustration since the third edition, which predates Bernanke's becoming Fed chair.  Ben has used the helicopter metaphor for monetary policy, but the metaphor is not original to him (or to me).  I would guess it started with Milton Friedman, but I am not entirely sure.

Selasa, 08 Oktober 2013

The Top of My To-read Pile

I am a friend and fan of the University of Chicago's John List.  (I had the pleasure of working with John about a decade ago at the Council of Economic Advisers.)  So at the very top of my pile of books to read is John's new one, with Uri Gneezy, called The Why Axis.

Senin, 07 Oktober 2013

No Risk of Default

My Harvard colleague Martin Feldstein writes me in an email:
The WSJ and FT continue to write about the risk of default, quoting the Treasury, Boehner and others.There really is no need for a default on the debt even if the debt ceiling is not raised later this month. The US government collects enough in taxes each month to finance the interest on the debt, etc. The government may not be able to separate all accounts into "pay" and "no pay" groups but it can certainly identify the interest payments. An inability to borrow would have serious economic consequences if it lasted for any sustained period but it would not have to threaten our credit standing.