Economics

Levi: What The Nobel Prize Tells Us About Oil

Michael Giberson Michael Levi, at his CFR blog, explains “What The Nobel Prize Tells Us About Oil“: Do you think that it’s straightforward to figure out whether high oil prices cause recessions? Many people apparently do. The 2011 Nobel Prize in Economics, awarded today to Thomas Sargent and Christopher Sims for “empirical research on cause and effect in the macroeconomy”, should make …

Levi: What The Nobel Prize Tells Us About Oil Read More »

A Political Economy Model for Occupy Wall Street

Lynne Kiesling What’s a political economy-oriented economist to make of Occupy Wall Street? So far I’ve found two complementary commentaries that reflect my analysis of the deeply flawed policies of the past couple of decades that have enabled the crony corporatism that seems to be at the core of the protest (just in my phrasing …

A Political Economy Model for Occupy Wall Street Read More »

Sargent-sims Nobel 2011

Lynne Kiesling Congratulations to Thomas Sargent and Christopher Sims for the 2011 economics Nobel. Marginal Revolution has developed a well-deserved reputation for go-to commentary on the Nobel; see Alex’s overview, Tyler’s comments on Sargent, and Tyler’s comments on Sims. Note also the Tyler points out Sargent’s work in economic history (his “small change” book with …

Sargent-sims Nobel 2011 Read More »

Markets Make You More Trusting, but Not Necessarily More Trustworthy

Michael Giberson In a randomized control experiment, subjects unconsciously primed to think about markets were more trusting in a subsequent anonymous economic exchange. The authors note that the positive effect of trust on economic growth is well documented — in particular, widespread market activity requires people to trust anonymous strangers — but scholars have been …

Markets Make You More Trusting, but Not Necessarily More Trustworthy Read More »

Price Gouging Laws Wasted Resources During the Hurricane Irene Emergency

Michael Giberson In a post at the Master Resource blog I point out another problem with anti-price gouging laws: during actual emergency conditions both state governments and consumers likely have much more important things to do that worry about whether particular price increases are unconscionable under the state’s understanding of that term. Among other points, …

Price Gouging Laws Wasted Resources During the Hurricane Irene Emergency Read More »

Demand for Gasoline is More Price-inelastic Than Commonly Thought

Michael Giberson A working paper from the UC-Berkeley Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics says that the demand for gasoline is more price-inelastic than typically thought. Here is the abstract, which points to publication selection bias as the culprit: One of the most frequently examined statistical relationships in energy economics has been the price elasticity …

Demand for Gasoline is More Price-inelastic Than Commonly Thought Read More »

A Coasian Look at Pesticide and Genetic Drift

Michael Giberson A few weeks back Lynne drew attention to an interesting property dispute between neighboring farmers in Minnesota, currently the subject of legal action (see news summary here, related court decision here). In brief, the issue is pesticide drift from conventionally farmed crops onto a neighboring organic farm, and whether the organic farm can …

A Coasian Look at Pesticide and Genetic Drift Read More »

Razor-Razorblade, Printer-Cartridge, … Tablet-Media

Lynne Kiesling Amazon’s announcement yesterday of their Kindle Fire tablet differentiates the tablet market in one discrete jump. Anticipated for months, the Fire does indeed compete head-to-head with the iPad, but not by mimicking its feature-rich and flexible platform. Amazon has made a strong Schumpeterian move to differentiate the market. Amazon’s move follows a storied …

Razor-Razorblade, Printer-Cartridge, … Tablet-Media Read More »