▽EconLog: Library of Economics and Liberty ●04/28 06:28 Labor Market Outtakes from my Nobel Article By: 〓 David Henderson The editor at the Wall Street Journal cut more meat than usual from my op/ed〓on the Nobel Prize winners. This isn’t a criticism. The Journal has its constraints and the editor told me that the piece needed to be shortened to fit on the page. I would rather have a short article than no article. Still, I think many r... Read More Oct
▽Knowledge and the Wealth of Nations ●04/28 06:17 David Warsh An account of the beginnings of “new” growth theory in the 1980s and ’90s. An independent weekly, free on the Web, supported by a relative handful of readers’ subscriptions.
▽Calculated Risk ●04/27 23:35 3rd Look at Local Housing Markets in October by Calculated Risk on 11/11/2021 01:36:00 PM Today, in the Real Estate Newsletter: 3rd Look at Local Housing Markets in October Excerpt: This is the third look at local markets in October. This update adds Albuquerque, Atlanta, Colorado, Houston, Jacksonville, Minnesota, Portland, Sacramento and Santa Clara. ... Here is a summary of active listings for
▽Inside the Economist’s Mind (I.T.E.M.) ●04/19 04:10 Paul A. Samuelson and William A. Barnett (eds.) Inside the Economist’s Mind のブログ My Keynote Lecture August 2021 Thursday, August 05, 2021 My Keynote Lecture My Keynote Lecture at the British conference last month is on youtube here: Shilnikov chaos and the downward drift in interest rates for the past 20 years posted by William A. Barnett | 7:29 PM | 0 comments
▽FREAKONOMICS BLOG ●04/18 22:40 06 20 2011 What Chess Tells Us About the Value of Perception As a physics student, I found that I could solve most of the problems simply by looking at derivations and listening carefully to my reactions to the equations. A soft voice inside me would say, ”No, that term just doesn窶冲 seem right. Go and find out what went wrong there.” Or, ”Ah, these terms hang together and the result feels right. I
▽Ideas ●02/24 09:16 David Friedman Saturday, October 23, 2021 A Very Interesting Graph Someone on Facebook commenting on my post there linked to an NOAA web page with a graph showing temperature, CO2, and insolation for the past 350,000 years. The pattern is interesting.During the previous three interglacials (yellow columns on the graph)temperature was falling. During two of the three, CO2 concentration was also falling, during th