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New book on the crisis of economics and teaching in Latin America
The book (in Spanish) titled "Economía en crisis : la enseñanza de la economía en Latinoamérica y los límites de la teoría ortodoxa" [Economy in Crisis: The teaching of economics in Latin America and the limits of orthodox theory] is edited Andrés Jose Maria Lambertini; Ignacio Silva Neira. The introductory chapter on the role of neoliberalism and its resilience in the region is by Esteban Pérez and myself. There's a webinar with Carolina Alves and Gabriel Porcile, besides the editors.It...
Read More »Democratic politics and the multiple audience problem: the case of Ukraine
One reason politics is so hard is that our words are often heard by different audiences, and a message that is well-calibrated for one type of listener may work poorly for listeners with different roles, values, or interests. To illustrate: Phillips O’Brien has a piece in the Atlantic with the headline “Time is on Ukraine’s side, not Russia’s”. He did not choose the headline, but this morning he defends it. He argues that it is important to...
Read More »Trump on debt ceiling
Trump still telling GOP to negotiate hard using threat of zero increase of debt ceiling…Ceiling to be reached this week after Thursdays auctions:Janet Yellen warns US will hit $31.4tn debt ceiling next week https://t.co/6KQEyQMy0y— Financial Times (@FT) January 13, 2023
Read More »Ultra MAGA budget fix
Liberal Art Bannon (Georgetown/Harvard) and Liberal Art Brat (Princeton/American U) with MAGA’s antithesis to MMT:Typical Platonist circle jerk…
Read More »New Deal democrat’s Weekly Indicators for January 9 – 13 2023
Weekly Indicators for January 9 – 13 at Seeking Alpha – by New Deal democrat My Weekly Indicators post is up at Seeking Alpha. One thing that comes with the territory of high frequency indicators is that they can be noisy. And at no time of the year can they be noisier as during and right after the Holiday season. That appears to be the case this week, as a number of coincident indicators in particular displayed volatility. This should...
Read More »A Bit of Peter Drucker for You All
“Peter Drucker Sets Us Straight,” January 12, 2004 (cnn.com), Peter Drucker and Brent Schlender This is an oldie from 2004 which still has relevance to what has occurred and is occurring in the world today. Any number of times I have found myself fixing supply chain operations globally for various companies of different countries. Ninety-Four year-old guru says most people are thinking all wrong about jobs, debt, globalization, and recession....
Read More »Steve & Friends with Guest Daniel Friedman. Episode 9
Can we learn something from ants when it comes to economics? This week's special guest is Daniel Friedman. Daniel has Ph.D. in Ecology & Evolution, and studies ants with complexity theory.
Read More »Capitalism and extreme poverty: A global analysis of real wages, human height, and mortality since the long 16th century — Dylan Sullivan and Jason Hickel
AbstractThis paper assesses claims that, prior to the 19th century, around 90% of the human population lived in extreme poverty (defined as the inability to access essential goods), and that global human welfare only began to improve with the rise of capitalism. These claims rely on national accounts and PPP exchange rates that do not adequately capture changes in people’s access to essential goods. We assess this narra- tive against extant data on three empirical indicators of human...
Read More »Real average wages and real aggregate payrolls for December 2022
Real average wages and real aggregate payrolls for December 2022 – by New Deal democrat Now that we know December consumer inflation, we can see how the American working/middle class is “really” doing. Nominally, average wages for nonsupervisory workers increased 0.2%, while prices deflated by -0.1%, meaning that “real” average wages increased 0.3% for the month: While this only returns them to April’s level, and -2.2% below their...
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