Check out Virginia Postrel’s Economic Scene column today, in which she analyzes whether or not war is good or bad for the economy. Of course, it cuts both ways. One of the interesting facts of economic history is that the physical and human devastation is the largest cost, while one benefit that has lots and …
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Check out Virginia Postrel’s Economic Scene column today, in which she analyzes whether or not war is good or bad for the economy. Of course, it cuts both ways. One of the interesting facts of economic history is that the physical and human devastation is the largest cost, while one benefit that has lots and …
Check out Virginia Postrel’s Economic Scene column today, in which she analyzes whether or not war is good or bad for the economy. Of course, it cuts both ways. One of the interesting facts of economic history is that the physical and human devastation is the largest cost, while one benefit that has lots and …
Check out Virginia Postrel’s Economic Scene column today, in which she analyzes whether or not war is good or bad for the economy. Of course, it cuts both ways. One of the interesting facts of economic history is that the physical and human devastation is the largest cost, while one benefit that has lots and …
Should The Federal Government Subsidize Hydrogen Fueling Infrastructure?
Today’s third part of RPPI’s five-part series on hydrogen addresses proposed subsidies to hydrogen fueling infrastructure, to solve the “chicken-and-egg problem” of vehicle demand and fueling supply. As the article points out, this is not a new problem, and we can learn from how solutions evolved in past instances.
Today the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is deciding on the extent of refunds that energy companies owe to California resulting from the 2000-2001 electricity policy fiasco. I’ve got an op ed on the issue in today’s Orange County Register, basically saying what I’ve said here before: enough already. Stop focusing resentfully on the past and …
Today the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is deciding on the extent of refunds that energy companies owe to California resulting from the 2000-2001 electricity policy fiasco. I’ve got an op ed on the issue in today’s Orange County Register, basically saying what I’ve said here before: enough already. Stop focusing resentfully on the past and …
Today the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is deciding on the extent of refunds that energy companies owe to California resulting from the 2000-2001 electricity policy fiasco. I’ve got an op ed on the issue in today’s Orange County Register, basically saying what I’ve said here before: enough already. Stop focusing resentfully on the past and …
Today the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is deciding on the extent of refunds that energy companies owe to California resulting from the 2000-2001 electricity policy fiasco. I’ve got an op ed on the issue in today’s Orange County Register, basically saying what I’ve said here before: enough already. Stop focusing resentfully on the past and …
The Economics Of Hydrogen
Today’s second piece in RPPI’s five-part series on hydrogen focuses on the economics of innovation. Hydrogen research will not proceed in a vacuum, but will occur in the context of continuing innovation of internal combustion engines. This simultaneous innovation of mature and new technologies has lots of historical precedents, and I highlight one of them …