Politics

More on Constitutional Institutional Design and Corruption

Lynne Kiesling Yesterday when I was channeling my inner Jenny Holzer on the relationship between political power and corruption, I quoted James Madison in the comments: In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige …

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Steven Chu to Be Next U.S. Secretary of Energy

Michael Giberson In the news, reports that Steven Chu will be nominated to become the next U.S. Secretary of Energy. Chu, a physicist who won the Nobel Prize in 1997, has been Director of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory since August, 2004. Tom Fowler at Newswatch: Energy observes that “Saying ‘the University of California-Berkeley’ and ‘U.S. …

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A New Kp Bailout Rule of Thumb

Lynne Kiesling The KP Spouse and I have evolved a new rule over the course of the succession of fall bailout fiascos: whenever Barney Frank argues for something, the economically sensible and correct public policy is to do precisely the opposite of what he advocates.

Notes on “Energy Czar”; a Reading Recommendation for the “Car Czar”

Michael Giberson “Energy czar” is a term with a pedigree in the United States, being applied at least as early as December 1973 to William E. Simon, who Nixon appointed to head the Federal Energy Administration. The Time article in the link observes that Simon was advocating a 50 mph national speed limit and a …

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Czar Talk

Michael Giberson What is with all of the czar talk? Most prominently in the news: “House Speaker Nancy Pelosi touted the notion of a ‘car czar’ Tuesday to supervise an auto industry bailout, saying Big Three executives haven’t adapted well to changing conditions,” reports the Associated Press. Who wants a czar? I believe the appropriate …

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Bailouts and Stimuli: the Hubris of Centralized Control

Lynne Kiesling Last Monday Mike asked “do you know what the car company of the future should look like?” The various politicians and bureaucrats who have been wrangling over the auto bailout requests think they do. The management of the “Big Three” have a vision that their shareholders have authorized them to pursue, but for …

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Do You Know What the Car Company of the Future Should Look Like?

Michael Giberson From the Steven Mufson article in the Washington Post, The Car of the Future — but at What Cost?: Many members of Congress believe they know what the car company of the future should look like. “A business model based on gas — a gas-guzzling past — is unacceptable,” Sen. Charles E. Schumer …

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“Power Reports Battle It Out” and Other Energy News from the Houston Chronicle

Michael Giberson The Houston Chronicle has long been one of the best newspapers for energy news, perhaps why it is frequently cited here at KP.* (You can subscribe to an RSS feed focused on Chronicle energy stories.) Over the last few days: “Power reports battle it out” — “A new crop of studies offering competing …

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More on Wind Power and Negative Prices

Michael Giberson Only after posting my earlier examination of the interaction of wind power, the production tax credit (PTC), and negative power prices in ERCOT did I discover a related analysis, “Curtailment, Negative Prices Symptomatic of Inadequate Transmission,” by Michael Goggin, an American Wind Energy Association analyst, that appeared in September at Renewable Energy World. …

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