Abstract Capital
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Slate: How would a prostitute pay taxes?

Slate: So Miracle Whip is mayonnaise is now for hipsters?

Economist: Comedy in America - Cheap and cheerful

Slate: Explaining nuclear weapons, mutually-assured destruction, & deterrence to my 5-year old son

Slate: What a fat tax really means

Economist: Google's corporate culture - Creative tension

Slate: What to do when all else has failed to change your kid's behavior

Slate: How mean are drill sergeants in real life?

TIME: Is Wikipedia a Victim of Its Own Success?

Economist: Chile's presidential election - The strange chill in Chile

CNN: How Jay-Z mended fences with his father

Slate: Are U.S. shipping companies still sending their clunkers to the toxic scrap yards of South Asia?

Slate: The case for not reading legislation

Slate: We still don't understand how fringe conservatism went mainstream
posted by Flaco @ 4:34 PM   0 comments
Friday, September 18, 2009
NYT: Overspending on Debit Cards Is a Boon for Banks

NPR: What Walt Disney Learned From South America

Slate: Do American doctors get paid too much?

NPR: Taking Doctors' Profits Out Of Medical Care Decisions

NPR: Rights Analyst Suspended Over Nazi-Era Collection

CSMonitor: Gaza war analyst - Does his Nazi-era collection indicate bias?

CNN: How to prevent a medical bill disaster

CNN: How to pack for vacation

Slate: Is detaining someone against their will ever legal?

NYorker: Are Obama's Judges Really Liberal?

TIME: Living Through a Recession Can Have Lasting Impact on the Young

TIME: Do You Have the Right to Flip Off a Cop?

Slate: How to tell a West Coast businessman from an East Coast businessman.

Slate: Glenn Beck says Cass Sunstein wants to give animals the right to sue humans. Really?

Economist: How strong is Obama's Belief in Free Trade?

Slate: What Facebook can learn from Gmail

Atlantic: Should we forget about democracy sometimes, in the name of stability in weak states?

Atlantic: Huntington Reviewed

Slate: Greed and fear often trump American companies' commitment to free speech.

Slate: If a charity spends less than half its funds on its programs, does that mean it's ineffective?

Slate: Do they Photoshop pictures of outer space?

Slate: Are blackboards greener than whiteboards?

Slate: How should the greatest tennis player on earth talk about his own greatness?

Atlantic: Should Jews Be Liberals?

Economist: The Age of Hostility - The New Merger Wave may bring more hostile takeovers than ever

Economist: Obama & free trade - A protectionist move that is bad politics, bad economics, bad diplomacy and hurts America. Did we miss anything?

CNN: Merrill bonus ruling marks latest setback for the SEC

Slate: Private health insurers charge more to give you less.

Economist: Carmakers have escaped calamity. Now they face a big, long-term problem: people are moving to smaller vehicles

Economist: Schumpeter, the Economist's newest column

NPR: Greener Houston Grapples With Diversity And Sprawl

Atlantic: The Menu of Malpractice Reforms

NPR: Fantasy Football - Increasingly A Woman's Game, Too

Atlantic: Does Homework Work?

CNN: Enforcing bedtimes improves kids' health

Slate: How do psychologists know that babies who are spanked become more aggressive toddlers?

CNN: Spanking detrimental to children, study says

CNN: A Look at Global Health-Care Systems

TIME: Teen Acne & Depression - Can Mood Worsen Skin?

FP: Putting the Human Rights Back in Human Rights Council

NRepublic: Better Regulate than Never

FP: Should we Scrap Foggy Bottom?
posted by Flaco @ 4:07 AM   0 comments
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Excellent Redux on Critiques of American Consumerism

"Shopping ourselves out of jobs"?

Glenn Reynolds at InstaPundit provided a link someone gave him to an older Fast Company article. As a regular customer at both Wal-Mart and Target, I fulfill that saying from free-market economics: seeking to maximize happiness for the least cost. All I care about is getting the most for my money, and if Wal-Mart has Vlasic pickles in certain quantities and configurations that I like, and their prices are cheaper, I'll go there if it's worth my time.

The article says, "Wal-Mart wields its power for just one purpose: to bring the lowest possible prices to its customers." At least it didn't accuse its top executives of pocketing most of the profits, but it degenerated into another rant against free trade and big business. Vlasic isn't "forced" or "pressured" to sell pickles to Wal-Mart at such low prices, just like PC manufacturers aren't "pressured" to sell their computers with pre-loaded Microsoft software. If Vlasic can consistently charge Wal-Mart a sufficiently low wholesale price that Wal-Mart can consistently sell pickles for $2.97 per jar, then obviously Vlasic can afford that price. Aren't they still in business?

The article said Vlasic would do better if Wal-Mart paid 50 cents more per jar. Of course! When Vlasic sells jars for 50 cents less than they'd like, they have a smaller producer surplus than they want; however, the consumer surplus increases by at least the same amount, so at worst, nothing is lost. Actually a little microeconomics can show that charging a higher price than equilibrium (like market power, or a sales or excise tax) causes some deadweight loss. (Later I'll have to whip up a little diagram illustrating this.) This means that as prices go downward to equilibrium, where by definition a seller makes enough profit to stay in business, society's total benefits approach maximization.

When I say "as prices go downward," I'm talking about competition applying downward pressure, not laws that force companies to sell no higher than a certain price. No no, nothing like Nixon, Burns and Connally's disastrous price controls, or the feds and states' ridiculous accusation that Microsoft could sell Windows licenses for less "and still make a profit." My aunt could "still make a profit" at her wine store by charging only 10 cents above wholesale. Yeah, she could "still make a profit," but she would go out of business.

What I found completely ludicrous was the quote that I used for this entry's title: "We're shopping ourselves out of jobs." Oh? Well if lower prices destroy jobs, then let's just double all prices to create them. With double the revenue, companies will be able to hire more people. But let's forget that all consumers will have their purchasing power halved. We'll all have jobs, so that's fine, right?

Gee, that's a real Utopia: everyone has a job, but we can only afford half (or less) of what we were able to.

The fact is that "shopping ourselves out of jobs" is impossible. Assuming the central bank does nothing to muck up the money supply, the lowest possible prices (meaning equilibrium prices where a seller makes enough profit to stay in business) function on the same principle as tax cuts: people have greater purchasing power, which means they can buy more things than before. This replaces any "lost" jobs. If they choose to save the money, businesses can borrow that money to expand, creating replacement jobs. There's no deadweight loss when it comes to lower prices, quite the contrary!

But what about deflation? When a firm earns less revenue, it has to pay people less or lay some people off, right? But that's not the same as Wal-Mart, or anyone else, charging lower prices because they can afford to do so. After all, Wal-Mart sells for very low prices (relative to most everyone else) and seems to stay in business just fine. That's because deflation and inflation are monetary problems, not problems with market pricing. They are also not exactly "lower prices" or "higher prices," not in the proper sense.

The article quotes Paul Krugman, but it's just a minor blurb talking about Wal-Mart's international connections.
Cite: http://eidelblog.blogspot.com/2005/03/shopping-ourselves-out-of-jobs.html
posted by Flaco @ 11:51 AM   0 comments
Economist: UNESCO and World Heritage Sites & the limits of soft cultural power

Economist: Scotus decides whether speech curbs are constitutional

Atlantic: Peerless in Seattle

Economist: Theories on Corporate Governance

FP: How China Cooks its Books (on Currency & Trade)

Slate: Pearl Jam's brilliant new single, brought to you by Target.

Atlantic: Judges are getting angry at the financial community

Atlantic: The GOP & Fiscal Conservatism

Economist: Black cowboys - Urban rodeo

Economist: Spain's judiciary - Judge Garzón in the dock

Slate: What kind of environmental impact do toilets have?

Slate: How good does a tennis pro have to be to make a living?

Atlantic: Hollywood Hates Capitalism

Economist: The People's Republic at 60 - A harmonious and stable crackdown

Economist: French criminal justice - A delicate judgment

NRepublic: What is Judicial Originalism?

Economist: Venezuela and Colombia - Politics versus trade

Slate: More Americans over age 50 are smoking marijuana than ever before. Are my parents among them?

Atlantic: Filing Bankruptcy as a Rich Person

Economist: Strife in Yemen - The world's next failed state?

Atlantic: Closing The Book On The Bush Legacy

Atlantic: The Rise of the Professional Blogger

CNN: Newcastle relegated after final day defeat

TIME: The NHS - Can Socialized Health Care Be Cost-Effective?

NPR: Beyond Earbuds - What's Next For The IPod?

CNN: Charming Gdansk full of 20th-century history

CNN: Fasting carries risk of overeating

Atlantic: Experimenting w/Ice Cream

Economist: Music Festivals - Big Bucks for Small Towns

Atlantic: Another reason to hate protectionism

CNN: Libertarian Ideas to Stimulate the Economy

ESPN: Off Base - Flying high with (the) Seattle Pilots

CSMonitor: Micronesia - Another kind of Sept. 11

Slate: Does Norway engage in international espionage?

Economist: America and eastern Europe - End of an affair?

Slate: Welcome to Yahoo! U

Atlantic: Rise of the Band Geek

Double-X: The Dirty Little Secrets of Yoga Teachers

FP: The bizarre relationship of Hugo Chavez and Oliver Stone

CSMonitor: How real is District 9?

TIME: Fantasy Football - It's Called Fantasy for a Reason

Newsweek: New Edition of 'Frankenstein' Clarifies Authorship

TIME: Fortress Asia - Is a Powerful New Trade Bloc Forming?

TIME: Ze Frank on Labor Day and Socialism (Video)

TIME: Jay Leno - New TV Show a Gamble for NBC
posted by Flaco @ 10:31 AM   0 comments
Friday, September 4, 2009
Laugh Update: Courtesy of The Onion
All of these are from the Onion:

'I'm Doing Just Fine,' Filthy, Unshaven Isiah Thomas Reports Into Banana

New College Freshman Refers To Dorm By Actual Name

Teenage Rebels Seize Control Of Food Court's Corner Table

Toronto Raptors Sign Unusually Tall Man

Roster-Depleted Bears Sign Tire Swing For Cutler To Throw To

Sci-Fi Writer Attributes Everything Mysterious To 'Quantum Flux'

Marcus Camby Caught Hacking NBA Computer To Change Clippers Power Ranking
posted by Flaco @ 11:23 PM   0 comments
Newsweek: Is Apple's Snow Leopard Worth the Money?

Economist: America's vigorous new antitrust policy - Return of the trustbusters

Economist: Race and the Department of Justice

Economist: Portugal's drug policy - Treating, not punishing

Slate: Will we ever run out of dinosaur bones?

Atlantic: Meet the Marijuana Snack Kings of the Future

Economist: Economics focus - Discounting that promotes competition is hard to distinguish from predatory pricing

Economist: Company size - Big is back

TIME: Why Do Muslims Fast During Ramadan?

Slate: How bad for the environment are cruise ships?

Atlantic: Beer Battle - America vs. Germany

Economist: Child Welfare - The Nanny State: Lavish public spending on the well-being of children does not always hit the mark

Slate: Albania, the Muslim world's most pro-American state

NPR: Legal Aid & Detroit - Not Enough Money Or Time To Defend Detroit's Poor

Economist: Economics focus - Fatalism v fetishism

Economist: Emigration from California - Go east or north, young man

Atlantic: Which Generation Has Cut Spending The Most?

Atlantic: Taxes Around the World

Economist: Tax rates - Effective tax rates

Economist: The Incredible Shrinking Trade Surplus - Is China deliberately understating the size of its trade surplus?

Slate: Should parents influence which classes their kids are in?

Economist: Regional trade deals are no substitute for a Doha agreement. Indeed, they are its enemy

Economist: Violent-crime rates - Serener streets

Economist: The Nightmare of Low-Level, Entry-Level, Federal Workers

Economist: The Noodle Bowl - Why Trade Agreements are All the Rage in Asia

Economist: The Juanes row in Miami - If music be the food of love...

Economist: Economics focus - Waist banned: Banning Fat Kids?

NPR: Tobacco Firms Sue Over New FDA Powers Claiming Harm To 1st Amendment Rights

NPR: The Agony And The Ecstasy Of Required Reading Lists

Slate: Why the Supreme Court should abolish political speech limits on corporations and unions

Slate: The GOP's fake doctor council

TIME: The Font War - Ikea Fans Fume over Switch to Verdana

Atlantic: Do Presidential Approval Ratings Follow the Dow?

Atlantic: Welfare Dons

Atlantic: How Too Big To Fail Got Even Bigger

Salon: Pfizer's huge fine - A disturbing trend

CNN: How to fight the property tax assessor

Economist: The Texas governor's race - A showdown with tumbleweeds

CSMonitor: Why Chavez is wooing autocrats abroad

Economist: An East African Federation?

Atlantic: Cairo & Mexico City - Similar Cities, But Why Does One have Low-Crime & the other High-Crime?

FP: Summit of the Americas - The Occasional Benefits of Live Summitry

FP: Pakistan's Obsession with India - Keeping Up with the Indians

FP: China and India Make for Strange Bedfellows on Terrorism

Atlantic: What To Serve Black People For Dessert (not racist, interesting social article)

Economist: The Economist in 1939

Slate: The cupcake boom is here. The cupcake crash is coming.

CNN: 10 things cooking taught me about life

Economist: Space industry - Do we have lift-off?

TIME: Four Years After Katrina - New Orleans' Green Makeover

Vanity Fair: Fashion, Qaddafi-Style

Slate: The hidden benefits of traffic tickets

Economist: Africa's population - The baby bonanza

Newsweek: How Nelson Mandela's Legacy Hurts South Africa

CNN: Study - High school put-downs could potentially put students behind
posted by Flaco @ 10:52 PM   0 comments
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Name: Flaco
About Me: Just another thinker.
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Friedrich Nietzsche - "All things are subject to interpretation whichever interpretation prevails at a given time is a function of power and not truth."

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