Lachlan Harris and Andrew Charlton have a piece in the Fairfax press decrying the collapse of centrism in Australia. There are some problems with their data. As William Bowe has pointed out, the change in voter attitudes described by Harris and Charlton as “polarisation” looks more like a straighforward increase in support for the left, rising from 19.5 per cent to 31.4 per cent over the period 1996 to 2016. Measures of voter disaffection show no consistent trend over the period except...
Read More »Economics in Two Lessons, Chapter 7
Thanks to everyone who the first six chapters of my book, Economics in Two Lessons. That brings us to the end of Lesson 1: Market prices reflect and determine opportunity costs faced by consumers and producers. Now its time for Lesson Two: Market prices don’t reflect all the opportunity costs we face as a society. I’ll start with a brief intro and then the draft of Chapter 7: Property rights, and income distribution As usual, I welcome comments, criticism and encouragement. The book so...
Read More »Fortune favours the brave (updated)
Most of the political commentariat were convinced that Bill Shorten had got things badly wrong by announcing his policy on dividend imputation immediately before the Batman by-election. It was even more striking that, despite the pressure, Shorten didn’t cave into demands for changes to the policy. Michelle Grattan, for example, described the policy as an “own goal“. After Labor’s easy win, she backed off a little bit, but still claimed that Labor “has a selling job“. M Maybe so, but I’d...
Read More »A sign of the times
Is the ball-tampering crisis: (a) A sign of our national obsessions with sport, trivia and scandals at the expense of more important issues; (b) A symbol of the socially corrosive and corrupting effects of neoliberalism; (c) The End of Western Civilization As We Know It Vote below
Read More »Grattan unreliable on electricity networks
The Grattan Institute has just released a report blaming high electricity network costs on public ownership and excessive reliability standards. I commented on a draft of the report, but there wasn’t much change in relation to my comments. My comments are over the fold. Let me offer the following, slightly ad hominem argument. Grattan has backed the National Energy Guarantee, a radical change in Australia’s energy policy, which was justified mainly by the occurrence of a single blackout...
Read More »Francis Bator has died
Francis Bator, the economist who popularized the term “market failure”, has died at the age of 92 after being hit by a car. His NY Times obituary is here. Francis’ passing is a cause of sadness for me as my book, Economics In Two Lessons draws heavily on his work from the 1950s and 1960s. He had read excerpts on Crooked Timber and corresponded with me about it, much to my surprise and delight. I was looking forward to sending him the manuscript but now I won’t get the chance.
Read More »Sandpit
A new sandpit for long side discussions, conspiracy theories, idees fixes and so on.
Read More »Monday Message Board
Another Monday Message Board. Post comments on any topic. Civil discussion and no coarse language please. Side discussions and idees fixes to the sandpits, please.
Read More »Another High Court disaster
The High Court has done a great job in messing up Australian democracy with its absurdly literalistic reading of the Constitutional provisions on dual citizenship. It’s now added another layer of disaster with its refusal to hear Labor’s attempt to have Liberal MP David Gillespie disqualified on the basis that he rented space to an Australia Post outlet. Of course, this case is utterly lacking in merit. Had the High Court heard it, and thrown it out without retiring for consideration, I’d...
Read More »Government report cheers for wage cuts
There’s been a lot of discussion recently about stagnation in real wages and the decline of the labour share of national income. In a recent Senate Submission, I made the point that there is nothing surprising about this For the last 40 years, changes in labour market regulation have been almost uniformly anti-union and anti-worker, while public policy has been premised on the desirability of reducing wages. I saw an interesting (and, I suspect, largely unconscious) illustration of this...
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