Archive for August, 2006

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Wind Tunnel Testing: Engineering For Structures and For Cycling

August 23, 2006

Lynne Kiesling

One of the ways to talk about using experimental economics to test-bed policy changes is to use the metaphor of the wind tunnel. Either as a metaphor or as an actual engineering tool, the wind tunnel can be extremely valuable.

It’s also true for cycling, as seen in this article from Bicycling magazine about MIT’s cycling team. They use the school wind tunnel to work on their performance, tweaking the margins between power and efficiency, depending on what type of race it is (time trials are a different beast from road races, for example).

A very cool article. My favorite sentence:

It’s not as much about proving that we’re strong cyclists as it is about proving that it’s not just being strong that makes you a good cyclist.

I also didn’t realize that having my bottle on the down bar was so much less aerodynamic than having it on the seat bar. Have to change that!

Hat tip to Steve Antler at EconoPundit. I hate to burst Steve’s preconception that the MIT crowd isn’t athletic, but in cycling, the intersection between geekiness and prowess is large. Whether it’s obsessing about your bike, your gear, your cyclocomputer, your body position, your cadence, technology is one of the cyclist’s best friends. So it doesn’t surprise me that Team MIT would win their regionals! Although Cornell’s got a lot of engineers too (and gorgeous cycling terrain), so what gives there?

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An Exhaustive Ethanol Post at FuturePundit

August 22, 2006

Lynne Kiesling

Run, don’t walk, to Randall Parker’s place and read his excellent and thorough post on the science, economics, and politics of ethanol in Brazil and the US. Chock full of outstanding and informative links.

I also had not thought about what he mentions in his parting comment about ethanol from biomass:

But my guess is that coming advances in cellulosic technology will so lower the cost of biomass ethanol that ethanol usage will increase greatly in the next 10 years. I do not treat that as a happy prospect. Large scale biomass energy production will cause humanity to compete (too successfully) with nature and take habitat away from other species. Since I’m fond of other species I’m not happy about that. I’d much prefer we use nuclear, solar, and other energy sources that use much smaller ecological footprints.

Sobering.

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MT Upgrade

August 22, 2006

Lynne Kiesling

Did two things here today: upgraded to MT 3.31, and finally futzed around with the container margins in the stylesheet to make the middle column wider. I tried to be sensitive to the different resolutions and screen sizes running around out there, but if you have troubles loading and reading, please drop me a line.

And if you are a Movable Type whiz who can give me some advice on how to format the archives and comments pages more nicely, please let me know! It’s beyond my current MT capabilities.

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Oil Price News Summary

August 22, 2006

Lynne Kiesling

This AP story on today’s oil market gives a nice overview of the roilings in the market over the past month. Thus far today markets are calm in anticipation of Iran’s response to the UN about its uranium enrichment.

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New Zealand Wine: Speaking of International Trade …

August 22, 2006

Lynne Kiesling

… as Tyler Cowen was yesterday, today we hear news that in the year ended June 30, New Zealand’s wine exports hit a record high. The grape harvest grew 11 percent and the value of wine exports grew 18 percent. NZ winemakers expect this trend to continue. Also interesting is the shift in the composition of the sales, with pinot noir now in second place behind sauvignon blanc, outpacing chardonnay for the first time.

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Measuring Economic Growth: Does the Swiffer Count?

August 22, 2006

Lynne Kiesling

Virginia Postrel’s Forbes column from the September 4 issue uses Adam Smith to great effect in analyzing how people complain that there’s economic stagnation, even though the evidence of growth and prosperity is obvious. We see the same phenomenon today.

Nowadays, candid and intelligent people–not to mention partisans–tell us that the average American’s standard of living has barely budged in decades. Supposedly only the rich are living better, while everyone else stagnates or falls behind.

She then asks the logical question: who’s buying all the stuff, then? The flat-screen tvs, the ipods, etc. Her comments highlight the research of my colleague Robert Gordon, who pays careful attention to productivity growth and income growth.

Gordon is the author of a much-cited study showing that from 1966 to 2001 real income kept up with productivity gains for only the top 10% of earners. What the pessimists who tout his study don’t say is that, while Gordon does find that inequality is increasing, he’s convinced that the picture of middle-class stagnation is false.

“The median person has had steadily improving standards of living,” he says. But real incomes have been understated. The problem lies in how the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics calculates the cost of living.

Do we want to know how much money it would take the typical American to buy today what the typical American bought 20 years ago? If so, what about all those things that didn’t exist back then–not just iPods and mobile phones but everyday items like wrinkle-free pants, effective sunscreens, prewashed salads-in-a-bag or comfy hotel beds?

In other words, the doom-and-gloom crowd looks at only one side of the equation, the income side. But innovation and technological change have meant two different effects on the cost side. First, innovation has reduced the cost of consuming some standard goods that are captured in government measures of standard consumption bundles. Second, what about all of those new products that have made such a difference in our lives that aren’t reflected in those “standard” consumption bundles?

The Swiffer is my favorite example of this phenomenon. The way we clean our houses, and the associated amount of time we have to spend doing it, has changed greatly in the past 20 years. Pre-moisturized towels for all kinds of uses, wet-jet brooms, and so on. But, as Virginia describes in her column, such changes aren’t reflected in the standard measures.

Is there a way to improve government productivity statistics? Part of the problem is backward compatibility; keeping the consumption bundle the same allows for longitudinal comparisions across time. But the tradeoff for that is that you lose information about changes in the composition of the bundle. Sounds to me like you need two statistics: a basic consumption bundle that does not change over time, and a consumption bundle that represents the actual weighted-average shares of what we actually consume.

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Mankiw on a Great Bayes Theorem Example

August 21, 2006

Lynne Kiesling

Greg Mankiw has a great example of how to use Bayes Theorem, applied to nomination and election markets for the 2008 Presidential race at Tradesports.

Perhaps if we followed Chris Dillow’s advice and taught gambling at school, we would have a more numerate and probabilistically literate population, so people would be more intelligent in interpreting polls, prediction markets, and results of blood tests. Hey, a girl can dream, can’t she?

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Natural Gas Prices Are A Boon For Oklahoma

August 20, 2006

Lynne Kiesling

The boom in natural gas prices has led to revived interest in drilling in Oklahoma and Texas:

A flurry of home building, packed hotels, the new cars and trucks cruising the red dirt oil patch along the Texas border 110 miles west of Oklahoma City announce a natural gas boom that hasn’t been seen here since the collapse of the last boom nearly 25 years ago.

The boom is good for state tax revenue too:

The prosperity has boosted tax revenues and created jobs. High prices and high demand have filled the state’s coffers just three years after the worst budget shortfall ever.

Tax collections on oil and gas production that bottomed out at $249 million in 1999 were at $1.2 billion through the first six months of this year. State leaders have used the revenue windfall to cut taxes by $627 million, while approving record spending for education and roads. Every Oklahoma public school teacher has been given a $3,000-a-year raise.

Oklahoma is one of a handful of major energy-producing states that have seen severance tax collection rise sharply on higher energy prices. In Texas, natural gas tax revenues zoomed from $628 million in 2002 to $1.7 billion in the past year, the biggest growth area in tax collection in the state.

I hope they all remember the boom/bust nature of the industry, and don’t get used to the profits and their associated tax revenue!

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EPL: The season begins

August 20, 2006

The KP household is ready for the 2006-2007 English Premiere League season:

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Here’s the problem: I root for Manchester City and Liverpool, the KP Spouse roots for Tottenham and Chelsea. Yes, the north/south divide there is no accident; I lived in Manchester for a spell in graduate school. Man City is my sentimental favorite, thus can’t root for ManU, but the felicitous coincidence of Liverpool being good and my favorite player playing for them means that I picked Liverpool as my team-to-support-against-my-husband.

It’s a strange version of domestic bliss, but it works for us.

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Is the New FCC Commissioner “On the Team”?

August 16, 2006

Lynne Kiesling

Sounds like it; Robert McDowell, the most recent FCC appointee, appears to believe that free and responsible people are capable of making their own decisions in the telecommunications realm:

McDowell, 43, also signaled that he won’t necessarily follow the wishes of FCC Chairman and fellow Republican Kevin Martin. That may make it harder for Martin to push through initiatives such as forcing cable companies to offer television channels separately. The FCC now has three Republican commissioners and two Democrats.

“I trust free markets and free people to make their own decisions,” McDowell said.

McDowell distanced himself from Martin’s efforts to force cable companies to offer their subscribers a wider range of programming packages. Martin has said that à la carte-style programming choices would allow consumers to save money and to avoid programming that they find objectionable.

In response to pressure from Martin and members of Congress, Philadelphia-based Comcast and New York-based Time Warner, the largest cable operators, created a new programming service limited to family-friendly channels.

McDowell said he’s reluctant to take further steps anytime soon. “It may be that consumer demand favors a private-sector resolution to that problem, so let’s see how that goes.”

A focus on enabling private parties to achieve mutually beneficial outcomes instead of using top-down dictum to control the outcome? What a concept!

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