Posts Tagged ‘ macro ’

Does the free market corrode moral character? Templeton Foundation

http://www.templeton.org/ Reported here by: SPMG, 11 August 2009

This is the fourth in a series of Templeton Foundation sponorsed conversations among leading scientists, scholars, and public figures about the “Big Questions.”

   Categories: commentary    Tags: , , , , ,   

The Frame of Mind of American Policymakers. M. Faber

http://dailyreckoning.com/  Reported here by: SPMG, 3 August 2009

I seldom become depressed, but when I consider that prosperity is created by “peace, easy taxes and a tolerable administration of justice” I really think that the U.S. and other Western governments are doing their very best to impoverish their countries.

   Categories: commentary    Tags: , , ,   

Wise Muddling Through: D. Brooks

http://www.nytimes.com/  Reported here by: SPMG, 4 August 2009

Everybody wants to be a striding titan. Almost all alpha-leaders want to be the brilliant visionary in a time of crisis—the one who sees the situation clearly, makes the bold plans and delivers the faithful to the other side. It almost never works out that way. The historian Henry Adams concluded that “in all great emergencies … everyone was more or less wrong.” Abraham Lincoln didn’t feel like a heroic leader: “I claim not to have controlled events, but confess plainly that events have controlled me.” In real crises, the successful leaders are usually the ones who cope best with ignorance and error.David Wessel’s about-to-be-released book, “In Fed We Trust,” gives a revealing blow-by-blow account of the recent financial crisis and illustrates this point….
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Opinions for sale: P. Krugman

http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/ Reported here by: SPMG, 3 August 2009

Suggests certain conservative think tanks flip flop on advocacy and policy positions depending on their financial interests. Provides two examples in support.
   Categories: commentary    Tags: ,   

Rating agencies and the logic of regulatory license : M. Flandreau, N. Gaillard

http://voxeu.org/ Reported here by: SPMG, 3 August 2009

How did the rating agencies come to have such a prominent role in the regulation of securities? This column traces their history back to the Great Depression. Ironically, the agencies became a regulatory instrument to address concerns about securities originators’ conflicts of interest, the very problem plaguing the agencies today. The lesson may be that no fixed regulatory solution is durable in the long run.

   Categories: briefing    Tags: , ,   

Productivity and the crisis. Revisiting the fundamentals: D. Brackfield, J. O. Martins

http://voxeu.org/ Reported here by: SPMG, 3 August 2009

Most narratives of the crisis start with problems in the financial sector that then spilled over into the real economy. This column looks at the real side first and shows that labour productivity growth declined significantly in the years prior to the crisis, particularly in the US construction sector. Financial markets may have failed in that they didn’t detect the deterioration of structural productivity trends in the early 2000s.

   Categories: briefing    Tags: , ,   

The theory of the fiscal stimulus: How will a debt-financed stimulus affect the future? W. M. Corden

http://www.cepr.org/ Reported here by: SPMG, 3 August 2009 

A new CEPR Policy Insight takes a close look at the Keynesian theory underlying the policy of fiscal stimulus being undertaken or considered in many countries, led by the US.

   Categories: briefing    Tags: , , , ,   

Happiness. The impact of growth, inequality and recession: J Wolfers

http://voxeu.org/   Reported here by: SPMG, 3 August 2009 

Justin Wolfers of the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School talks to Romesh Vaitilingam about happiness economics – the state of knowledge; the explosion of data; the debate about the Easterlin paradox; the impact of inequality and the business cycle on people’s happiness; and the implications for public policy. The interview was recorded at the Centre for Economic Performance in London in June 2009.

   Categories: briefing    Tags: , , , , ,   

How far will US home prices fall? W. Wheaton

http://voxeu.org/ Reported here by: SPMG, 3 August 2009

Is the US due for a protracted decline in housing prices? This column argues that fundamentals on the supply side of the housing market imply that US housing prices are about to bottom out. They should resume rising soon.

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