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Adam Smith Institute Blog

  • Blog Review 562

    That American recession/depression. You know, it looks like the falling dollar is boosting exports, curbing imports and taking up the slack. Just like, umm, economic theory would predict.

    The most important question in climate change science is, what is climate sensitivity? As several note.

    Yes, there really [...]

    Posted: April 09, 2008, 9:50am EDT
  • Comments

    The blog's comments function has been malfunctioning, and has been temporarily disabled while we upgrade it.

    Hopefully it should be up and running again soon. 

    [...]
    Posted: April 09, 2008, 5:10am EDT
  • Bad news for Brown

    Gordon Brown, our increasingly beleaguered prime minister, seems to have a rebellion on his hands over the abolition of the 10 percent starting rate of income tax.

    When he announced the measure in his final budget as chancellor hardly anyone on the Labour benches noticed, so bowled over [...]

    Posted: April 09, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 86

    86. "We should extradite any citizen accused of crimes by overseas prosecutors."

    The readiness of British governments to act at the behest of overseas prosecutors has been a disturbing development. It has included extradition to face trial abroad for actions done in the UK which are not criminal here. [...]

    Posted: April 09, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Sign up now!

    The ASI's annual bloggers event is coming up next week, on Wednesday 16th April. This year's theme is is 'Curbing the crap artists'. Guido Fawkes will tell us what to do with crap politicians, Tim Worstall will dish the dirt on crap journalists, and Samizdata's Perry de Havilland will deal [...]

    Posted: April 09, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • And another thing...

    The only reason a great many American families don't own an elephant is that they have never been offered an elephant for a dollar down and easy weekly payments. Mad Magazine [...]
    Posted: April 09, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 561

    More selections of those old Tory posters mentioned above (or, erm, below, given the reverse order of blogs....). Here and here. There's some thought that the immediacy, the force, of the messages has declined over the years.

    Here's the numbers on one country that has successfully dealt with climate [...]

    Posted: April 08, 2008, 9:23am EDT
  • And here is the BBC News: Your Way!

    I must say, I think this is an absolutely marvellous advance. We pay for the BBC, after all, so we really shouldn't have any of that elitist nonsense about a factual reality or anything. No, news should be presented to show the world as "you" believe it to be, not [...]

    Posted: April 08, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • The costs and spoils of social engineering

    Sweden is often depicted as a Social Democratic paradise. However, her welfare state has achieved less and cost more than most believed. The point is that wealth distribution and flat income have not significantly changed after Sweden expanded her welfare programmes during the 1950s and 1960s, when workers enjoyed lower [...]

    Posted: April 08, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Common Error No. 85

    85. "Curbs on budget airlines are needed to protect the environment."

    Budget air flights emit a tiny fraction of the CO2 and other 'greenhouse gases' that are put out from all sources.  They are insignificant compared to the emissions of agriculture, road transport and power generation.  The problem is [...]

    Posted: April 08, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • And another thing...

     
    Courtesy of the Daily Mail, two amusing old posters from the Conservative Party archive at the Bodleian Library, Oxford. More available here.   
    [...]
    Posted: April 08, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 560

    Nigel Lawson's new book on global warming gets a great couple of write ups. The biggest concern is probably that what the science and the scientists are saying seems not to be what the politicians are listening to.

    It's only April and already we have a contender for oddest [...]

    Posted: April 07, 2008, 9:55am EDT
  • George Soros and free markets

    I have to admit that I did something of a double take when I saw this from George Soros:

    Regulators have abandoned their duty by letting markets regulate themselves. It's because a market fundamentalist ideology has come to dominate the behaviour of market participants and market regulatorsover the past 25 [...]
    Posted: April 07, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 84

    84. "We must bring in tougher laws and sentences against drug dealers and users."


    Narcotics are evil, and sensible people should not go down that road. However, they are out there, and young people will be exposed to them. To some their very illegality adds the spice of [...]
    Posted: April 07, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Freedom Week 2008

    Why not attend a free freedom seminar for UK students? 

    Freedom Week is a one week free seminar for thirty students about the principles of a free society based on the free market and individual liberty. It is taught by eminent academics and supported by the main UK free market think [...]

    Posted: April 07, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • Quote of the day

    The hardest thing in the world to understand is the income tax. Albert Einstein [...]
    Posted: April 07, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 559

    OK, so it's party political propaganda: that doesn't stop it being true in this case. Abolishing the 10p tax band means raising taxes on the working poor. A better answer would be to raise the personal allowance to take them out of tax altogether.

    These modern policing methods: they really [...]

    Posted: April 06, 2008, 7:33am EDT
  • Drug crazed loons

    HMG's considered thoughts on what to do about drugs is containted in this document. It's an absolute masterpiece, quite the apotheisis of the bureacractic art. There is page after page of detailed plan, of targets to be set and met, of who is the departmental owner of this and [...]

    Posted: April 06, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 83

    83. "Developing nations need tariff walls to protect their fledgling industries."

    The argument goes that unless developing countries protect their industries by tariffs, they will be unable to compete with mature multinationals backed by global resources. Supporters of this position usually say that America and Europe had tariff protection [...]
    Posted: April 06, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • All change, please

    Yesterday morning I attended an exhibition of plans for the redevelopment of the Ram Brewery in Wandsworth, south-west London. I was impresssed – both by the plans themselves and by the amount of people the developers had there to discuss the project with local residents.

    It's a long [...]

    Posted: April 06, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • Quote of week

    "Need" now means wanting someone else's money. "Greed" means wanting to keep your own. "Compassion" is when a politician arranges the transfer. Joseph Sobran [...]
    Posted: April 06, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 558

    Hillary Clinton stumbled across a wonderful example of an economic truth: unfortunately, she took away the wrong conclusion from it.

    Talking of economics, why did it start so late? In short, study of the economy started around and about the time there was an economy to study. 

    We continue to [...]

    Posted: April 05, 2008, 9:35am EDT
  • The third way is a dead end

    According to Pierre Garello, Professor of Economics at the University Paul Cézanne Aix-Marseille, the 'Third Way' is holding back France, because the 'Third Way' is in practice socialism.

    Garello shows the despondency the 'Third Way' has created in the youth of France. Among 16-29 year olds, only 39 [...]

    Posted: April 05, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 82

    82. "Competition is wasteful."

    Some people claim that competition uses more resources, producing many variants of products where only one is needed. It doesn't work that way because people have different tastes and values and prefer different products.

    Producers rarely make products identical to those of their rivals, but will [...]

    Posted: April 05, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Adam Smith's house

    The proposed sale of Adam Smith's house in Edinburgh, where he spent the last twelve years of his life, has sparked international interest. The house is currently owned by the local authority, who didn't even bother to mention the connection with the great economist in their sale particulars. But it [...]

    Posted: April 05, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • And another thing...

     

    Ed Balls, the Schools Secretary, and Andy Burnham, the Culture Secretary, take a break from affairs of state.

    Courtesy of Boulton & Co (via Comment Central). 

    [...]
    Posted: April 05, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 557

    The progressives (what we are now supposed to call the socialists) do seem to have landed upon a most odd logo to go with their conference today. Really, most, most odd. If anyone has a physical copy of it, headed notepaper or the like, [...]

    Posted: April 04, 2008, 9:09am EDT
  • Common Error No. 81

    81. "Under capitalism the rich waste resources on luxuries."

    They don't waste resources, they spend them. One of the points about being rich is that you can do nice things and buy good stuff. These goals help to inspire people to economic achievement and what Adam Smith called "the [...]

    Posted: April 04, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Had he been drinking?


    "I think the [pub] industry's right to be upset. We, and I speak as a champion of the pub trade, want the chancellor to change his mind... The next opportunity will be the pre-Budget report in November."

    Oops. I bet he's not looking forward to his next meeting [...]
    Posted: April 04, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Does trade exploit the poor?

    It can be quite depressing trying to convince paid-up members of the Aid Brigade that people will climb out of poverty by selling things, and not by being given money taken from richer people. For that matter soup kitchens are no real substitute for people selling things and being able [...]

    Posted: April 04, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • Book of the week

    .

    It covers all the basics about choice, competition and entrepreneurship, and prices. But it's short, fun, anecdotal and accessible. So hopefully it will serve to spread the the understanding among the public, students – even politicians – that markets are actually a good thing. Indeed, the book's sub-title is How [...]

    Posted: April 04, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 556

    So Hillary Clinton has compared herself to Rocky Balboa. But, umm, which version?

    An interesting rumour from Wall Street: who was it that started the run on Bear Sterns? 

    Another interesting bit of digging: the Bank of England was told that a strategy of aggressive wholesale funded expansion might [...]

    Posted: April 03, 2008, 9:38am EDT
  • Yes, there really is a trade off

    One of the dividing lines in the political debate is between the egalitarians and those more like myself who worry more about absolute living standards. On the one side those who say that inequality is a problem which we must use tax and redistribution to resolve, on my side those [...]

    Posted: April 03, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 80

    80. "We need to control movements of capital across borders to prevent funds leaving the country that are needed for investment here."

    We used to have exchange controls, dating from World War II and regarded as permanent. People going abroad were only allowed to take out £50 at a [...]

    Posted: April 03, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Back to School

    The Stockholm Network released its latest policy video yesterday, this time tackling education reform and commending the Swedish model. Summing up the video's message, Helen Disney, the SN's director, said: "The State should continue to fund most primary and secondary education, but such money ought to follow pupils in [...]

    Posted: April 03, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • The Next Generation with Phil Booth

    We had the April meeting of our next generation group this week at our offices in Westminster. The guest speaker was Phil Booth (pictured), the national co-ordinator of the influential NO2ID campaign.

    Sticking to the strict 10-minute time limit, Phil took us on a whistle stop tour of [...]

    Posted: April 03, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • And another thing...

    From GQ Travel, April 2008:

    "Bringing back a bit of enjoyment to the modern day rigours of air travel - that's the main philosophy underpinning Terminal 5's launch. Whether you're skipping the country for business or pleasure, the terminal's mood is perfectly suited for a spot of pre-flight shopping..."

    [...]
    Posted: April 03, 2008, 1:59am EDT
  • Blog Review 555

    Indeed, enquiring minds want to know. As and when Gordon Brown announces that Cannabis will be upgraded again to a Class B drug, with 5 year potential sentences for simple possession, will those of his Cabinet who have admitted to "experimenting" (and not enjoying, giggle) be tried and jailed? [...]

    Posted: April 02, 2008, 7:43am EDT
  • Darzi's good idea

    Here's an idea. Give patients in Britain's state-run National Health Service (NHS) their own healthcare budgets. Then they would be able to buy in the treatment they want, from whatever source they choose, rather than having to put up with the decisions of some distant central bureaucracy. Most patients, especially [...]

    Posted: April 02, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 79

    79. "We should discourage use of private cars by making them more expensive to drive."

    Private cars are already hit by vehicle excise duty and fuel tax, in addition to parking fees and congestion charges. The money raised from these is part of the general budget, rather than earmarked [...]

    Posted: April 02, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • The Best Book on the Market

    Posted: April 02, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • Quote of the day

    Government is force, and politics is the process of deciding who gets to use it on whom. This is not the best way to solve problems. Richard Grant, The Incredible Bread Machine [...]
    Posted: April 02, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 554

    Apparently there are still one or two brave souls who are liberals on the subject of immigration.

    A depressing look at the current emissions targets. For example, if the transport reductions are ten times more expensive than those from electricty and heating, wouldn't we do better to ignore the [...]

    Posted: April 01, 2008, 10:47am EDT
  • Making life difficult

    Is it me, or is someone determined to make simple stuff harder? Not long ago, when you applied to get your kid into a particular state school, you weren't always successful, but at least you got the impression that some human being had considered the application. Recently our youngest was [...]

    Posted: April 01, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 78

    78. "Government investment is vital to protect industry and jobs."


    It puts these resources into industries for whose goods and services there is not enough private demand. Government tends to choose industries for political, not economic reasons, and to make bad choices. "Picking winners" means picking losers. For [...]

    Posted: April 01, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • April Fool's Day

    This being April Fool's Day, I thought I'd give you a few lines that you could use to make buffoons of your friends.

    Start by telling them that the UK now has a higher tax burden than Germany. That the average Brit has to work more than five months [...]

    Posted: April 01, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • And another thing...

    Over on the Telegraph's Brassneck blog, Alex Singleton notes the pump-advertising on Weston's Casablanca beer. Its a little hostile to the Prime Minister...
     
    Add this to the campaign to ban the Chancellor from every pub in the land, and it's clear the government is losing the support of [...]
    Posted: April 01, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 553

    An excellent little map showing the conditions on the ground during the election in Zimbabwe.

    A very odd idea, that markets do not cater to minorities. Are we not all a minority of one?

    How to make a fortune running a hedge fund. Alternatively, don't invest with someone who [...]

    Posted: March 31, 2008, 11:11am EDT
  • About those hedge funds

    The Telegraph has a nice piece about the hedge funds and Brad Delong comments upon it here. All very interesting but still missing one vital point: that the current blowups amongst hedge funds are exactly the way this liberal capitalism, this market allocation of investment, is supposed to [...]

    Posted: March 31, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 77

    77. "We must subsidize our industries, to compete with foreigners who do the same to theirs."

    We want industries that can compete on world markets. They can do that by matching the products of their rivals in both quality and price, and by learning to adapt quickly to changing [...]

    Posted: March 31, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • America's tax freedom

    I keep an eye out for web mentions of Tax Freedom Day – that day in the year when we at last stop working for the tax authorities and at last start working for ourselves. And over the last couple of weeks, I've spotted lots and lots of mentions, because [...]

    Posted: March 31, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • Quote of the day

    It's no accident that capitalism has brought with it progress, not merely in production but also in knowledge. Egoism and competition are, alas, stronger forces than public spirit and sense of duty. Albert Einstein [...]
    Posted: March 31, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 552

    Clearly something is amiss when a Liberian Imam knows more about statistical testing than an English County Council.

    This isn't illegal (yet) although it is highly amusing. 

    Lord of the Rings is really a discourse upon property righs. You didn't know that, did you? 

    Some backpedalling upon [...]

    Posted: March 30, 2008, 7:02am EDT
  • Compensating the Losers from Trade

    Free Exchange, a blog from The Economist, looks at how to compensate those who lose their jobs as a result of a change in either the flows or restrictions upon trade. Retraining seems like a reasonable response. However, this opens up the question of whether we do in fact [...]

    Posted: March 30, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 76

    76. "If state industries are opened up to competition, private firms cream off the lucrative trade, leaving the poor and outlying regions without adequate service."

    This argument exists only on the fiction shelves of libraries. In practice the private sector shows a remarkable ability to make profits on what [...]

    Posted: March 30, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • And another thing...

    Hillary now says that she just made an honest mistake when she said she had to duck sniper fire in Bosnia. There was no hostile fire of any kind. Although, ironically, while she was away, Bill Clinton did see some action. Jay Leno [...]
    Posted: March 30, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 551

    The Freedom of Speech apparently nowadays means the freedom to say what the government approves of. Further details here: that enlightenment thing, so old hat, don't you think?

    Freedom of information appears to be suffering similarly. 

    Another example of an old economic favourite: how much is [...]

    Posted: March 29, 2008, 10:07am EDT
  • The effects of the smoking ban

    I'm sure there was supposed to be a massive increase in the pub trade as a result of the smoking ban. Absolutely certain of it in fact. For there was that huge pent up demand, wasn't there, all those non-smokers who were denied their right to a social pint or [...]

    Posted: March 29, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 75

    75. "Democracy is a sham with no real choice because all the major parties basically support the system."

    This is an argument popular among those whose views find little support. They say that choice in our free elections is illusory because Conservative and Labour, Republicans and Democrats, are all [...]

    Posted: March 29, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Time to kill crop-derived biofuels

    the chorus against crop-derived biofuels, as Lewis Page reports.
    Dr Richard Pike, chief of the Royal Society of Chemistry, has said that biofuels are a "dead end" and "extremely inefficient", and that the government was wrong to impose a requirement for 5 per cent biofuel content in motor fuel by 2010.
    Dr [...]
    Posted: March 29, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • Quote of the day

    I am unable to accept the idea that I should be an obedient subject of a gang of corrupt, unprincipled thugs who pontificate about freedom while enslaving the population. John Pugsley [...]
    Posted: March 29, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 550

    What it is like when you've got a serious amount of inflation in the economy.

    Yes, many are calling for increased regulation in these difficult times. That doesn't mean that we should in fact have more regulation: for it is extremely rare that the results are those intended. 

    Words to [...]

    Posted: March 28, 2008, 11:34am EDT
  • Hillarys and Huckabees

    The Cato Institute's David Boaz, who seems to have been churning out a lot of good quotes lately (see here and here), had an excellent article in the Lima News earlier this month. His subject was "The Hillarys and the Huckabees", the two groups that threaten individual [...]

    Posted: March 28, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 74

    74. "Essential services are too important to leave to the private sector, and have to be done by the state."

    The assumption here is that state provision somehow guarantees that essential services will be delivered. In reality it is the important things that we should keep out of the [...]

    Posted: March 28, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Nothing new

    Globalization isn't new, points out Tim Worstall at the Globalisation Institute.  He's had a preview of an upcoming paper by Prof Leslie Hannah which shows that "Most of Europe's (and Britain's) problems of restricted twentieth-century growth derive from the tariff escalations, wars, dictatorships, expropriations, partitions, nationalism and related problems [...]

    Posted: March 28, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • And another thing...

    I'm a little upset. You know, Hillary Clinton was supposed to be our first guest tonight, but she got pinned down by sniper fire and was not able to come in. Jay Leno [...]
    Posted: March 28, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 549

    The Great Ban Darling Campaign is gathering momentum. The Telegraph, The Morning Advertiser (for those unaware, this is the publican's paper, so important in such a campaign), Guido, Guido again...please add further sightings in the comments.

    Spending taxpayers' money on lawyers so that taxpayers can't find out [...]

    Posted: March 27, 2008, 10:34am EDT
  • Ban the chancellor

    There is a campaign afoot to ban Alistair Darling, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, from every pub in Britain. Its organizers are annoyed that he increased the duty on Alcohol in his budget, and not without reason.

    The 2008 budget added 4p to the price of a [...]

    Posted: March 27, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 73

    58. "If people don't like the policies of their trade union, student union or local council, they have only their own apathy to blame. They should become more active and change things."

    Why should they?  Why should people be punished for the pursuit of their lawful interests?  Why should [...]

    Posted: March 27, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Hilarious


    It has been wonderful to watch Hillary Clinton getting into trouble over her 'inaccurate' claims that she had to dodge sniper fire while on a visit to Bosnia as First Lady. Next we'll be finding out that she didn't bring peace to Northern Ireland or re-open the Macedonian border [...]

    Posted: March 27, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • Freedom 101

    , the recently published compilation of all 101 of Dr Madsen Pirie's Common Errors, is now available on Amazon for the bargain price of £4.79.

    The book refutes many of the common errors of economic, political and social debate. Many of them are in daily circulation as if they were truisms. [...]

    Posted: March 27, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 548

    It would appear that Hillary Clinton is not the only person with slightly misty recollections of the past.

    More Hillary: is this the scariest thing you've heard this electoral season or what? 

    The Interior Designers Guild is comparing itself to the AMA: well, yes, they are indeed doing exactly [...]

    Posted: March 26, 2008, 10:17am EDT
  • Common Error No. 72

    72. "Scarce resources should be allocated on the basis of need, instead of going to the highest bidder."

    If scarce resources are allocated on the basis of need, they stay scarce. When allocation is other than by price for goods in short supply, nothing is done to relieve the [...]

    Posted: March 26, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Just another day on the trains


    The thing is, everyone blames the train companies (i.e. the privatized rail operators) for these sorts of problems. Yet it is actually Network Rail (the renationalized version of Railtrack) that is to blame. And the trouble with Network Rail is that it just isn't accountable to consumers. The only [...]

    Posted: March 26, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • The bloggers are coming to town

    The date is Wednesday April 16th, and the bloggers are out in strength at the Adam Smith Institute. The evening's theme is "Curbing the Crap Artists," with three top line bloggers to show how. Tim Worstall will speak on curbing the crap journalists. Guido Fawkes will tell us how to [...]
    Posted: March 26, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • Quote of the day

    It should be remembered that behind every ridiculous regulation stands the government's willingness to enforce it, with violence if necessary. David Boaz [...]
    Posted: March 26, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 547

    As Bernard Levin predicted those years ago with his spotting of the Single Issue Fanatic, the decisive change in life has been the march of the zealots. It's led to a large fall (sad to say) in social liberalism along the way.

    Indeed, a substantial decline in liberalism [...]

    Posted: March 25, 2008, 11:12am EDT
  • Common Error No. 71

    71. "Business is polluting the environment, which we should all enjoy, just for the benefit of the rich."

    Most people pollute the environment. Some do it with sewage, some with the smoke from fires or the fumes from petrol or diesel engines. Business which uses energy tends to pollute, [...]

    Posted: March 25, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • And in the dust be equal made??

    A New York Times article by Robert Pear reports on a US government research finding that the there is an widening socio-economic disparity in life expectancy, as well as in income levels. Not only has the income gap been widening, but the number of years that affluent people can expect [...]

    Posted: March 25, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Electoral reform

    ConservativeHome asks whether the government’s new found enthusiasm for electoral reform could have anything to do with the Conservatives’ poll lead (recently put as wide as 16 percent). Frankly, it had not occurred to me that there would be any other reason for it. The official line, however, is [...]

    Posted: March 25, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • Quote of the day

    We cannot water down the European political project and turn the European Union into just a free trade area on a continental scale. Why not, Romano Prodi? [...]
    Posted: March 25, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 546

    We prefer here to point you to the good and the interesting but just this once it'll to be the appalling, the near insane. Although, to be fair, it is also interesting in something of a car crash way. Possibly the worst misunderstanding of trade possible in recent times. [...]

    Posted: March 24, 2008, 11:41am EDT
  • Top political books

    Iain Dale's published his list of the 75 top political books. He's a UK based politician and journalist, so no surprise that most of them are indeed about the UK. It's possible that I'm quibbling a bit when I decry the list as being jam packed to the rafters [...]

    Posted: March 24, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 70

    70. "A sensibly planned economy is more efficient than random chaos."

    But who advocates random chaos?  The market economy is not random disorder; it is a spontaneous and unplanned order. The so-called "planned" society means one which is planned at the centre by one mind or a few. The [...]

    Posted: March 24, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • The Adam Smith statue

    The statue of Adam Smith which will soon go up in the historic heart of Edinburgh is taking shape. It's currently in the workshops of Morris Singer, the specialist art founders, where sculptor Alexander Stoddart has been adding some finishing touches. According to Stoddart it is one of the best [...]

    Posted: March 24, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • Blog Review 545

    Why is it that politicians are delighted to create incentives but then insist that no one will be influenced by them?

    Big Egg, coming to a holiday celebration near you.

    This statement is somewhat startling, if true. 

    A list of the top 75 (UK) political books. Netsmith's personal view [...]

    Posted: March 23, 2008, 11:10am EDT
  • How to replace the profit motive

    Or, at least, how to try and replace the profit motive. One of the things that can be very hard to get across is the idea that making a profit isn't simply or solely a manifestation of human greed: it's also information. Making a loss is the market's way of [...]

    Posted: March 23, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 69

    69. "Britain's wealth came from exploiting its colonies, and should be repaid to some degree."

    The source of this error is interesting. When the British economy neither collapsed  nor produced greater poverty as Marx had predicted, communist theorists invented the imperial excuse. The British had postponed the evil day [...]

    Posted: March 23, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Quote of the week

    A libertarian is someone who believes in liberty, not in chaos; in the rule of law, not in lawlessness; and in a voluntary social order, not in anomie and isolation. Libertarianism is the heart and soul of the modern world. There's no reason to run away from it. David Boaz [...]
    Posted: March 23, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 544

    And now for the third and final installment of the video series on the Laffer Curve. Perhaps the most important insight is that we should not be scoring tax changes statically, but dynamically.

    Beware of those comparisons between today and the Great Depression. Or an alternative description, bad regulation [...]

    Posted: March 22, 2008, 10:48am EDT
  • Nothing on offer

    And so it continues. The debate between those who favour tax cuts and those who say they do yet will not offer them is not leaving quietly. Should the economy worsen over the coming 18 months there is little doubt that between now and the next election this debate [...]

    Posted: March 22, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 68

    68. "Great inequalities of income cannot be justified."

    Inequalities of income do not need to be justified. The economic rewards in market-oriented societies are not supposed to be just. They reflect the economic worth of the goods and services provided, and in no sense correspond to our notion of [...]

    Posted: March 22, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Into the red

    With the news that the Green Party’s London mayoral candidate Sian Berry has urged her backers to give their second preference votes for the current mayor Ken Livingstone and visa versa, it is worth taking a look at what the Green Party is offering London.

    Here are a few [...]

    Posted: March 22, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • Blog Review 543

    Were the Russian privatisations of the 1990s as bad as some say? Perhaps not, given that they're now well functioning and profitable companies.

    Most interesting to see how policy is actually made at the EU level. Don't expect to even be allowed to stay in the meeting if you're [...]

    Posted: March 21, 2008, 10:31am EDT
  • Time for a change


    Britain has a severe shortage of good school places, which means children frequently have no option but to be assigned to a school by their Local Education Authority (LEA), even if its quality is low.

    There are two reasons for this shortage. The first is the 'surplus-places [...]
    Posted: March 21, 2008, 2:03am EDT
  • Common Error No. 67

    67. "Some things, such as health, should not be provided for gain."

    Why not? If gain will motivate people to supply necessary goods and services, then it can be a useful way of ensuring supply. All goods and services cost something, and the prospect of gain is a good [...]

    Posted: March 21, 2008, 2:02am EDT
  • Insuring your nose

    Wednesday's Times carried the news that Ilja Gort, a Dutch wine producer, had managed to insure his nose and sense of smell for £4 million with Lloyd's of London. The article revealed that Ken Dodd's teeth are insured for the same amount, while Bruce Springsteen's voice is valued at [...]

    Posted: March 21, 2008, 2:01am EDT
  • Saving the health of the nation

    This week I attended the launch of Saving the Health of the Nation, an excellent short film from the Stockholm Network which looks at the failings of the National Health Service and introduces the idea of Health Savings Accounts as the most promising route for reform. The film features [...]

    Posted: March 21, 2008, 2:00am EDT
  • Blog Review 542

    The excellent and surprising value of mobile telephones on the lives of the poor.

    A very different take on the current financial markets turmoil. 

    Should we be concerned about falling asset prices? Well, if we're interested in redistribution of assets, possibly not. 

    An invaluable (if not exactly new) guide [...]

    Posted: March 20, 2008, 8:05am EDT
  • A strong and ineffective touch


    Speaking at the launch of the Conservative Report, A Light But Effective Touch, David Cameron claimed: "We will only get tax and regulation down... if business plays its role in being responsible... I want low taxes and a low regulation economy, but we won't get that unless we [...]
    Posted: March 20, 2008, 2:03am EDT
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